The Eclectic Magazine of Foreign Literature, Science, and Art, Volume 1; Volume 64Leavitt, Trow, & Company, 1865 - American literature |
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Page 34
... Feeling too fatigued to return for it , he dispatch- ed a woodman to seek it for him , while he and his servant sat down to refresh themselves . As the woodman did not return , the priest sent his servant in quest of him . He soon found ...
... Feeling too fatigued to return for it , he dispatch- ed a woodman to seek it for him , while he and his servant sat down to refresh themselves . As the woodman did not return , the priest sent his servant in quest of him . He soon found ...
Page 45
... feeling which are incongruous . But they agree of pleasurable surprise is aroused , we in flowing from a particular turn of have all that is necessary to constitute thought which enables a writer at once wit . It would be difficult to ...
... feeling which are incongruous . But they agree of pleasurable surprise is aroused , we in flowing from a particular turn of have all that is necessary to constitute thought which enables a writer at once wit . It would be difficult to ...
Page 46
... feeling of incongruity , for Mr. Pecksniff has been sitting over his wine , and it is natural that his ideas should not flow with severely logical precision . So , in the case of the gentle- man who remarks that " there is a poe- try in ...
... feeling of incongruity , for Mr. Pecksniff has been sitting over his wine , and it is natural that his ideas should not flow with severely logical precision . So , in the case of the gentle- man who remarks that " there is a poe- try in ...
Page 52
the feelings for my money , though he mayn't look it . " " Stay a minute , ' said Short . A man of the name of Jerry ... feeling one way or other for the principal actors , there is a very general impression that if Mr. Dickens's young ...
the feelings for my money , though he mayn't look it . " " Stay a minute , ' said Short . A man of the name of Jerry ... feeling one way or other for the principal actors , there is a very general impression that if Mr. Dickens's young ...
Page 54
... feelings strong- ly acted upon . That Mr. Dickens must keep constantly before him the require- ments of some such ... feeling that a person who appreciated their meaning would touch with extreme reserve ; but it is distinctive of him ...
... feelings strong- ly acted upon . That Mr. Dickens must keep constantly before him the require- ments of some such ... feeling that a person who appreciated their meaning would touch with extreme reserve ; but it is distinctive of him ...
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