Let such troubles of the past be forgotten : all that I now remember of many a weary night and day is the vision of a great soul in torment, and through purgatorial fires the ineffable tenderness of the real man emerging, with his passionate appeal to... The Life and Work of John Ruskin - 541 psl.autoriai: William Gershom Collingwood - 1893Visos knygos peržiūra - Apie šią knygą
| William Gershom Collingwood - 1900 - 488 psl.
...more than enough,—much of it absurdly untrue, the romancing of ingenious newspaper-correspondents ; some of it, the lie that is half a truth. For in these...horrible or a grotesque nightmare. Some, in those trials, learnt as they could not otherwise have learnt to know him, and to love him as never before. There... | |
| William Gershom Collingwood - 1902 - 450 psl.
...newspaper-correspondents ; some of it, the lie that is half a truth. For in these times there were not wantinoo parasites such as always prey upon creatures in disease,...horrible or a grotesque nightmare. Some, in those trials, learnt as they could not otherwise have learnt to know him, and to love him as never before. There... | |
| Frederic Harrison - 1902 - 232 psl.
...left him beaten down at last, to learn that he must accept the lesson and bow before the storm." " All that I now remember of many a weary night and...the real man emerging, with his passionate appeal for justice and baffled desire for truth. To those who could not follow the wanderings of a wearied... | |
| Frederic Harrison - 1902 - 238 psl.
...purgatorial fires the ineffable tenderness of the real man emerging, with his passionate appeal for justice and baffled desire for truth. To those who could not follow the wanderings of a wearied brain, it was nothing but a horrible or a grotesque nightmare. Some in those trials learned... | |
| John Ruskin - 1908 - 928 psl.
...more than enough, — much of it absurdly untrue, the romancing of ingenious newspaper-correspondents; some of it, the lie that is half a truth. For in these...horrible or a grotesque nightmare. Some, in those trials, learnt as they could not otherwise have learnt to know him, and to love him as never before."1 Something... | |
| John Ruskin - 1908 - 922 psl.
...than enough, — much of it absurdly untrue, the romancing of ingenious newspaper-correspondents ; some of it, the lie that is half a truth. For in these...horrible or a grotesque nightmare. Some, in those trials, learnt as they could not otherwise have learnt to know him, and to love him as never before."1 Something... | |
| Arthur Christopher Benson - 1911 - 360 psl.
...the beautiful and tender words of one of his nearest friends, Professor Collingwood, on the subject: Let such troubles of the past be forgotten : all that...horrible or a grotesque nightmare. Some, in those trials, learnt as they could not otherwise have learnt to know him, and to love him as never before. The affliction... | |
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