Littell's Living Age, Volume 162Living Age Company Incorporated, 1884 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 72
Page 134
... style be the man himself , merits of style must to some extent be matters of taste , about which we say there is no disputing ; not at all because they are indisputable , but merely because in such matters every one is sui generis , and ...
... style be the man himself , merits of style must to some extent be matters of taste , about which we say there is no disputing ; not at all because they are indisputable , but merely because in such matters every one is sui generis , and ...
Page 135
... style ; and yet without language style can do nothing . A grammar perfectly correct , and a vocabulary perfectly pure , do not suffice to constitute a beautiful style ; but , for all that , there can be no beauty of style without ...
... style ; and yet without language style can do nothing . A grammar perfectly correct , and a vocabulary perfectly pure , do not suffice to constitute a beautiful style ; but , for all that , there can be no beauty of style without ...
Page 419
... style offends us . and if half they have said could be relied architecture , then , can be produced in on , to adopt the right style would be sal times and places where there is no living vation , and the wrong one , destruction . style ...
... style offends us . and if half they have said could be relied architecture , then , can be produced in on , to adopt the right style would be sal times and places where there is no living vation , and the wrong one , destruction . style ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Amorgos Arabs asked Barbara beautiful better Bill Rogers Blackwood's Magazine Bossuet brigade called Challoner Church copecs course dear death dress El Teb England English eyes face fact father feel Filip girl give Greek hand Harding Hayes head heard heart honor hundred Iris Irish Italy John Rothwell kind king knew Lady Thwaite land less live looked Lord Madame Magda Malay marriage Mary Matilda matter means ment mind Miss Mitchelhurst monody mother nature ness never once Overton passed perhaps poet poetry poor Prince Princess Reynold Rothwell round Rudniki Scotland seemed side Sir William smile Sophocles speak stone stood style Suakin tell things thought tion town Trinkitat turned Venice village whole wife William the Silent woman words young