The Quarterly Review, Volumes 98-99John Murray, 1856 |
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Page 2
... truth , of which nobody can lose the impression . We see the man as he appeared to his friends , to his wife , and are well pleased to lose a lit- tle ideal beauty for the sake of the homely reality . We commonly , ' says Pascal , and ...
... truth , of which nobody can lose the impression . We see the man as he appeared to his friends , to his wife , and are well pleased to lose a lit- tle ideal beauty for the sake of the homely reality . We commonly , ' says Pascal , and ...
Page 16
... truth being that it was rich in ease , sense , and humour ; while theirs was like the breakfasts in military novels , which seem to consist chiefly of devilled kidneys , grilled bones , and other fiery and salamandrine elements . 6 We ...
... truth being that it was rich in ease , sense , and humour ; while theirs was like the breakfasts in military novels , which seem to consist chiefly of devilled kidneys , grilled bones , and other fiery and salamandrine elements . 6 We ...
Page 18
Treatment . By Mary Carpenter . Lon- reason to acknowledge the truth of the don . 1853 . poet's caution , that 3. Mettray : a Lecture read before the Leeds Philosophical and Literary So- ciety . By Robert Hall , M.A. , Recorder of ...
Treatment . By Mary Carpenter . Lon- reason to acknowledge the truth of the don . 1853 . poet's caution , that 3. Mettray : a Lecture read before the Leeds Philosophical and Literary So- ciety . By Robert Hall , M.A. , Recorder of ...
Page 21
... truth which lies at the foun- irksomeness , and struggle to escape from dation of reformatory discipline : - it ; and it is only when this feeling is over- come , and they begin to settle down to a routine of duties , that hopes of ...
... truth which lies at the foun- irksomeness , and struggle to escape from dation of reformatory discipline : - it ; and it is only when this feeling is over- come , and they begin to settle down to a routine of duties , that hopes of ...
Page 37
... truth in the tradition preserved by a late writer ( Alcyonius de Exilio ) who had heard from Demetrius Chalcondylest that the Greek priests prevailed on the Byzan- tine Emperors to order the poems of Me- nander , Philemon , Sappho ...
... truth in the tradition preserved by a late writer ( Alcyonius de Exilio ) who had heard from Demetrius Chalcondylest that the Greek priests prevailed on the Byzan- tine Emperors to order the poems of Me- nander , Philemon , Sappho ...
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