The Quarterly Review, Volume 72J. Murray, 1843 |
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Page 115
... talents and engaging manners - in part , no doubt , to the fortunate accident which had assembled so many excellent instructors , and so many men who have realized the bright promise of their youth , by legal , by political , or by ...
... talents and engaging manners - in part , no doubt , to the fortunate accident which had assembled so many excellent instructors , and so many men who have realized the bright promise of their youth , by legal , by political , or by ...
Page 410
... talents by every social and domestic virtue ; as full of sense and worth as of learning and taste , polished with all the grace of courts , yet like Chaucer's knight , as modest as a maid . ' It is not too much to say that Sir George ...
... talents by every social and domestic virtue ; as full of sense and worth as of learning and taste , polished with all the grace of courts , yet like Chaucer's knight , as modest as a maid . ' It is not too much to say that Sir George ...
Page 550
... talents ; for he considered an ascetic life as very beneficial to the mental powers . Modesty also forbad his making presents , or doing any essential services to artists or authors , who might perhaps in their idle emotions of ...
... talents ; for he considered an ascetic life as very beneficial to the mental powers . Modesty also forbad his making presents , or doing any essential services to artists or authors , who might perhaps in their idle emotions of ...
Contents
The Lady of the Manor Being a Series of Conversations | 25 |
Peregrine Bunce By the Author of Sayings | 53 |
25 | 72 |
Copyright | |
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