Littell's Living Age, Volume 164Living Age Company Incorporated, 1885 |
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Page 26
... feeling mind to seek after them , or to notice them when they present themselves . In this idea originated the plan of ... feel nor understand . Coleridge accordingly wrote the " An- cient Mariner " with a view to its inser- tion in a ...
... feeling mind to seek after them , or to notice them when they present themselves . In this idea originated the plan of ... feel nor understand . Coleridge accordingly wrote the " An- cient Mariner " with a view to its inser- tion in a ...
Page 29
... feeling connected with the incident of the sailor's mother . And as to your com- plaint that there is an incongruity ... feel at finding a subject which seems to me naturally prosaic Sir John Stoddart's casual recitation , a year treated ...
... feeling connected with the incident of the sailor's mother . And as to your com- plaint that there is an incongruity ... feel at finding a subject which seems to me naturally prosaic Sir John Stoddart's casual recitation , a year treated ...
Page 31
... feeling mind " have given such splendid utterance to the emotions they excite . No : the forces that made Wordsworth a poet were far differ- ent from those conscious reasonings on man and society of which he gives an ac- count in " The ...
... feeling mind " have given such splendid utterance to the emotions they excite . No : the forces that made Wordsworth a poet were far differ- ent from those conscious reasonings on man and society of which he gives an ac- count in " The ...
Page 36
... feel that I might safely leave dear mother to her only son , not only to his support , but to the tender- ness of his love and the warmth of his hearth . " Queen Caroline , and what was of infi- nitely more 36 AT ANY COST .
... feel that I might safely leave dear mother to her only son , not only to his support , but to the tender- ness of his love and the warmth of his hearth . " Queen Caroline , and what was of infi- nitely more 36 AT ANY COST .
Page 37
... feel- ings were not for her . She would never leave her mother . Well , she had her mother to love and to work for , and what would life be without that ? And Tom Ollison asked himself whether it did not seem very hard that Peter San ...
... feel- ings were not for her . She would never leave her mother . Well , she had her mother to love and to work for , and what would life be without that ? And Tom Ollison asked himself whether it did not seem very hard that Peter San ...
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asked Austria Battle of Otterburn beautiful Bismarck Blackwood's Magazine Bonson Borroughdale Brundish called character Charles Dickens course daugh dear Della Cruscan Delphine door doubt emperor England English eyes face father feel Frances French Fuegians ganja George Eliot German girl give glish hand head heard heart Hittites hope hundred interest Jane Austen Jolliffe knew Lady less letters light live look Lord matter means ment mind Miss morning mother nature never Nidderdale night once passed perhaps poet poetry political poor present question replied round savage seemed Siberia side songs speak spirit stood strong suppose sure Sydney Smith Tacitus tell thing thought thousand tion told took town Ts'èng turned voice walk whole words writing young