The Living Age, Volume 250Living Age Company, 1906 |
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Page 24
... sense of touch , which stamps it at once . The excellence here displayed is not of that kind . It is a forced excellence ; an excellence not exerting itself freely , but constrained , whether it will or no , to celebrate the supremacy ...
... sense of touch , which stamps it at once . The excellence here displayed is not of that kind . It is a forced excellence ; an excellence not exerting itself freely , but constrained , whether it will or no , to celebrate the supremacy ...
Page 25
... sense of dignity and stateliness runs all through the splen- dor of this reign , as it runs all through its life and politics , and makes one con- stantly aware that it is a splendor com- patible with a certain large effective- ness of ...
... sense of dignity and stateliness runs all through the splen- dor of this reign , as it runs all through its life and politics , and makes one con- stantly aware that it is a splendor com- patible with a certain large effective- ness of ...
Page 27
... sense for reality has become a lost sense . Children are not real- ities ; wives and husbands are not real- ities ; victories and defeats , as we shall see in a minute , and shame and dis- honor are not realities . Nothing can exist ...
... sense for reality has become a lost sense . Children are not real- ities ; wives and husbands are not real- ities ; victories and defeats , as we shall see in a minute , and shame and dis- honor are not realities . Nothing can exist ...
Page 31
... sense of reality in the Court party , not less clearly does this also appear when we turn to the intellectual movement of the age . In France , more distinctly than elsewhere , the idea leads the way and the great outburst of the ...
... sense of reality in the Court party , not less clearly does this also appear when we turn to the intellectual movement of the age . In France , more distinctly than elsewhere , the idea leads the way and the great outburst of the ...
Page 56
sense of humor to be " a hindrance to practical success in life , " though one could wish this were not so . The great proportion of men who send post- cards " in haste " to say they are " much too busy to answer " belong almost al ...
sense of humor to be " a hindrance to practical success in life , " though one could wish this were not so . The great proportion of men who send post- cards " in haste " to say they are " much too busy to answer " belong almost al ...
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Antony Antony and Cleopatra asked Beaujeu Bill called character Charlbury Christianity Church Cleopatra cried Dane Délémont Dering door Dorcas doubt Duma English eyes face fact faith feel fleet French give Government guns H. C. Bailey hand head Healy heart House House of Commons House of Lords interest Jack Julius Cæsar King lady lady Sunderland land laughed legislation less letters LIVING AGE looked lord Lord Chancellor matter means Mejenetsky ment mind Mistress nature ness never once Othello Parliament passed Paudeen perhaps play political Port Arthur present Prue question Rose round Russian scene seems sense Sherborne side sion sleep smiled speak spirit stand Sunderland sure tell things thought tion told ture turned vegetarian Vladivostock voice Wharton whole woman words write