The Works of John Ruskin, 34 tomasG. Allen, 1908 |
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xxiv psl.
... perhaps no man has ever studied so many sunrises , as Ruskin . He saw them and he did not let them go ; he " kept them bottled , " as he said in an aside in the lecture , " like his father's sherries " 2 - bottled in minute descriptions ...
... perhaps no man has ever studied so many sunrises , as Ruskin . He saw them and he did not let them go ; he " kept them bottled , " as he said in an aside in the lecture , " like his father's sherries " 2 - bottled in minute descriptions ...
xxxv psl.
... perhaps in his praises than in his disparagements . Certainly one may read these brilliant critical essays with profit and with pleasure , without admit- ting that George Eliot's characters are but " the sweepings of the Pentonville ...
... perhaps in his praises than in his disparagements . Certainly one may read these brilliant critical essays with profit and with pleasure , without admit- ting that George Eliot's characters are but " the sweepings of the Pentonville ...
xxxvi psl.
... perhaps have presented some inconveniences . For the position to which Ruskin sought to pin down his antagonist , and from which the argument proceeds with ruthless exactitude , is the condemnation of " usury , " by the literal text of ...
... perhaps have presented some inconveniences . For the position to which Ruskin sought to pin down his antagonist , and from which the argument proceeds with ruthless exactitude , is the condemnation of " usury , " by the literal text of ...
xli psl.
... perhaps , for the Devil is too clever not to consume his own smoke ' ] . ' So far from wishing to give votes to women , I would fain take them away from most men . ' ' There is only one way to have good servants ; that is , to be worthy ...
... perhaps , for the Devil is too clever not to consume his own smoke ' ] . ' So far from wishing to give votes to women , I would fain take them away from most men . ' ' There is only one way to have good servants ; that is , to be worthy ...
xlii psl.
... perhaps spend half a page of analytic vituperation " ( p . 470 ) . Mark Pattison's comment is this : - " What has happened to Mr. Ruskin - the drying up of the richest source of poetical expression , the power of metaphor - is only what ...
... perhaps spend half a page of analytic vituperation " ( p . 470 ) . Mark Pattison's comment is this : - " What has happened to Mr. Ruskin - the drying up of the richest source of poetical expression , the power of metaphor - is only what ...
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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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