Igdrasil, 1 tomasG. Allen, 1890 The journal of the Ruskin Reading Guild. A magazine of literature, art and social philosophy. |
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8 psl.
... character- istic of the Victorian era , though in every department it must rank as a Renaissance epoch . The one fact is the critical attitude which I have endeavoured to expound the standpoint of the sympathetic observer ; differing ...
... character- istic of the Victorian era , though in every department it must rank as a Renaissance epoch . The one fact is the critical attitude which I have endeavoured to expound the standpoint of the sympathetic observer ; differing ...
20 psl.
... characters , admiring amongst others Freneli in " Ulric the Farm Servant " and " Ulric the Farmer . " When he wished for a trans- lation of these books into English I set to work ; he told me a translation should be " closely accurate ...
... characters , admiring amongst others Freneli in " Ulric the Farm Servant " and " Ulric the Farmer . " When he wished for a trans- lation of these books into English I set to work ; he told me a translation should be " closely accurate ...
21 psl.
... character in matronly dignity , and into nobleness answering the high demand made upon her , is full of power and truth to nature . The French version , unlike that by Max Buchon of the " Bernese Stories , " only professes to be a free ...
... character in matronly dignity , and into nobleness answering the high demand made upon her , is full of power and truth to nature . The French version , unlike that by Max Buchon of the " Bernese Stories , " only professes to be a free ...
33 psl.
... character of a novel - writer , and comes forward in that of a pamphleteer . In an ordinary historical novel the fact that some of the persons and events are real and some fictitious is of no moment to the reader . The reader , as long ...
... character of a novel - writer , and comes forward in that of a pamphleteer . In an ordinary historical novel the fact that some of the persons and events are real and some fictitious is of no moment to the reader . The reader , as long ...
34 psl.
... character , now a battle piece , now an idyll ; going from town to country , from this group to that , yet knowing that in all this multiplicity there is steadily growing the unity of the great design . The writing is alive from the ...
... character , now a battle piece , now an idyll ; going from town to country , from this group to that , yet knowing that in all this multiplicity there is steadily growing the unity of the great design . The writing is alive from the ...
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110 psl. - He giveth his beloved sleep Ps. cxxvii. 2. OF all the thoughts of God that are Borne inward unto souls afar, Along the Psalmist's music deep, Now tell me if that any is, For gift or grace, surpassing this ' He giveth His beloved sleep ' ? What would we give to our beloved?
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