The Complete Works of William Hazlitt, Volume 6 |
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Page 40
instinctively on some one mark or sign by which he designates the individual , and never lets it go , for fear of not meeting with any other means to express himself by . A cant phrase , an odd gesture , an oldfashioned regimental ...
instinctively on some one mark or sign by which he designates the individual , and never lets it go , for fear of not meeting with any other means to express himself by . A cant phrase , an odd gesture , an oldfashioned regimental ...
Page 203
Whatever he fancies , becomes by this means present to his sense : whatever he commands , is done . He calls back time past , and anticipates the future : the visions of antiquity pass before him , Babylon in all its glory , Paris and ...
Whatever he fancies , becomes by this means present to his sense : whatever he commands , is done . He calls back time past , and anticipates the future : the visions of antiquity pass before him , Babylon in all its glory , Paris and ...
Page 207
The intermediate comic parts , in which Faustus is not directly concerned , are mean and grovelling to the last degree . ... but that does not , by any means , imply either a practical or speculative disbelief of them .
The intermediate comic parts , in which Faustus is not directly concerned , are mean and grovelling to the last degree . ... but that does not , by any means , imply either a practical or speculative disbelief of them .
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