The Living Age, Volume 250Living Age Company, 1906 |
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Page 23
... ness and depth of interest . And yet , the delightful complacency with which the philosophy of this particular class is voiced for us by the glittering har- mony through which we move , makes it impossible not to wish to transcribe the ...
... ness and depth of interest . And yet , the delightful complacency with which the philosophy of this particular class is voiced for us by the glittering har- mony through which we move , makes it impossible not to wish to transcribe the ...
Page 25
... ness of character and aim . With the passing of the Grand Mo- narque , however , this majesty passes too . " Avec le dernier soupir du plus majestueux des rois , la majesté , déjà quelque peu méconnue , achève de s'envoler de la terre ...
... ness of character and aim . With the passing of the Grand Mo- narque , however , this majesty passes too . " Avec le dernier soupir du plus majestueux des rois , la majesté , déjà quelque peu méconnue , achève de s'envoler de la terre ...
Page 27
... ness has to be paid for in the loss of a corresponding amount of interest in what is real and important . It is this loss of interest in what is real and im- portant which is the really deadly symptom of the French Court life of the ...
... ness has to be paid for in the loss of a corresponding amount of interest in what is real and important . It is this loss of interest in what is real and im- portant which is the really deadly symptom of the French Court life of the ...
Page 31
... ness to the dying out 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 ...
... ness to the dying out 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 ...
Page 32
... ness and directness give that excite- ment vent . But this , after all , reveals a destruc- tive rather than a constructive purpose , and it is by its constructive purpose that the real character of a movement declares itself . What ...
... ness and directness give that excite- ment vent . But this , after all , reveals a destruc- tive rather than a constructive purpose , and it is by its constructive purpose that the real character of a movement declares itself . What ...
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Common terms and phrases
Antony Antony and Cleopatra asked Beaujeu Bettesworth Bill Blackwood's Magazine called character Christianity Church Cleopatra cried Dane Délémont Dering door Dorcas doubt Duma English eyes face fact faith feel fleet French girl give Government H. C. Bailey hand head Healy heart House House of Lords human interest Julius Cæsar King lady lady Sunderland land laughed legislation less letters LIVING AGE looked lord Lord Chancellor means Mejenetsky ment mind Mistress nature ness never once Othello Parliament passed Paudeen perhaps Peter political Port Arthur present Prue question Richard Seddon Rose round Russian seems sense Sherborne side sion smiled speak spirit stand Sunderland sure tell things thought tion told tragedy ture turned vegetarian verse Vladivostock voice Wharton whole woman words write young