The Works of John Ruskin, 34 tomasG. Allen, 1908 |
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xxxiv psl.
... feeling , the heroic themes , and the sense for the great style which are to be counted among the poet's virtues . In this respect the present essays should be read with the chapter of Præterita in which Ruskin again renders homage to ...
... feeling , the heroic themes , and the sense for the great style which are to be counted among the poet's virtues . In this respect the present essays should be read with the chapter of Præterita in which Ruskin again renders homage to ...
xlii psl.
... feeling of the evil of life , and the mistakes of the managers of affairs , continues to be no less intense than it was in our youth , while the power of venting our indignation in veiled sarcasm , or flashing figure , is no longer at ...
... feeling of the evil of life , and the mistakes of the managers of affairs , continues to be no less intense than it was in our youth , while the power of venting our indignation in veiled sarcasm , or flashing figure , is no longer at ...
6 psl.
... feeling ; but he was unable to eradicate the confusion from their minds ; and when he came ( § 35 ) to describe the grand Old Man as looking quite frantic , his added ' I mean the mountain ' was only just in time to save a second ...
... feeling ; but he was unable to eradicate the confusion from their minds ; and when he came ( § 35 ) to describe the grand Old Man as looking quite frantic , his added ' I mean the mountain ' was only just in time to save a second ...
12 psl.
... feeling in old age . Homer has his word about that too , hasn't he ? -that nobody knows one's old sinews . - Ever grate- fully yours , J. RUSKIN . ' ( Talks about Autographs , by George Birkbeck Hill , 1896 , p . 26 , where the letter ...
... feeling in old age . Homer has his word about that too , hasn't he ? -that nobody knows one's old sinews . - Ever grate- fully yours , J. RUSKIN . ' ( Talks about Autographs , by George Birkbeck Hill , 1896 , p . 26 , where the letter ...
38 psl.
... feeling like dead snails ; and the half - ripe strawberries all rotten at the stalks . ” 36. ( 6. ) And now I come to the most important sign of the plague - wind and the plague - cloud : that in bringing on their peculiar darkness ...
... feeling like dead snails ; and the half - ripe strawberries all rotten at the stalks . ” 36. ( 6. ) And now I come to the most important sign of the plague - wind and the plague - cloud : that in bringing on their peculiar darkness ...
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answer beautiful believe Bishop BRANTWOOD Broughton-in-Furness Byron Chace character Christ Christian Church Clavigera Clergy cloud colour compare Vol Coniston Daily Telegraph DEAR SIR,-I edition Editor English faithful servant father Fortunes of Nigel give Guy Mannering heart Heart of Midlothian Heaven HERNE HILL honour interest JOHN RUSKIN June lecture Lord Lord's Prayer Malleson Manchester manner matter means mind Modern Painters Museum nature never Nineteenth Century Old Mortality Oxford painting Pall Mall Gazette paper passage persons picture piece Præterita prayer Pre-Raphaelite Preface present printed quoted reader reference reply Reprinted in Igdrasil Rob Roy Ruskin's letters Scott sense song tell Thee thence in Ruskiniana things Thirlmere thou thought tion title-page usury Venice verse volume Waverley word Wordsworth write written XXII XXIX XXVII XXXIII XXXIV
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