Littell's Living Age, Volume 105Living Age Company Incorporated, 1870 |
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Page 46
... seen remains a permanent pos- session . And when we are told that the Bennet family , with all its humours - the father who is so good and sensible , and yet such an unmitigated bear ; the mother whom portionate anxiety must have been ...
... seen remains a permanent pos- session . And when we are told that the Bennet family , with all its humours - the father who is so good and sensible , and yet such an unmitigated bear ; the mother whom portionate anxiety must have been ...
Page 57
... seen men's moral honesty " inducing them to cut asunder the ties of old friend- ships and old associations , and to abandon , " What was before all things to have been de- for the sake of what they held true , the pos- sired for him was ...
... seen men's moral honesty " inducing them to cut asunder the ties of old friend- ships and old associations , and to abandon , " What was before all things to have been de- for the sake of what they held true , the pos- sired for him was ...
Page 58
... seen the be- ginnings of the brief - lived Republic . The next year he writes in one of his letters : - 66 I am not so clear as you are of the rotten- ness of this poor old ship here [ in England ] . Something , I think , we rash young ...
... seen the be- ginnings of the brief - lived Republic . The next year he writes in one of his letters : - 66 I am not so clear as you are of the rotten- ness of this poor old ship here [ in England ] . Something , I think , we rash young ...
Page 66
... seen . " Saturday Review . This may seem a hard saying to him whose lungs are inflated with the ozone of Parnassus . THE Telegraph mentions a story for which we have seen no other authority , that the Italian Government have engaged the ...
... seen . " Saturday Review . This may seem a hard saying to him whose lungs are inflated with the ozone of Parnassus . THE Telegraph mentions a story for which we have seen no other authority , that the Italian Government have engaged the ...
Page 67
... seen that they writ of the foreign King to which he owes forestall several questions which have been that , though he has sunk many degrees in raised in Professor Huxley's Lecture before rank and wealth , he is at least not driven the ...
... seen that they writ of the foreign King to which he owes forestall several questions which have been that , though he has sunk many degrees in raised in Professor Huxley's Lecture before rank and wealth , he is at least not driven the ...
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Popular passages
Page 210 - The East bowed low before the blast In patient, deep disdain ; She let the legions thunder past, And plunged in thought again.
Page 442 - It is the representative of his best moments, and all that there has been about him of soft and gentle and pure and penitent and good speaks to him for ever out of his English bible It is his sacred thing, which doubt has never dimmed, and controversy never soiled. In the length and breadth of the land there is not a protestant with one spark of religiousness about him, whose spiritual biography is not in his Saxon bible...
Page 226 - Yet faded from him; Sidney, as he fought And as he fell and as he lived and loved Sublimely mild, a Spirit without spot, Arose; and Lucan, by his death approved: Oblivion as they rose shrank like a thing reproved.
Page 342 - I will not be put to the question. Don't you consider, Sir, that these are not the manners of a gentleman ? I will not be baited with what and why ; what is this ? what is that ? why is a cow's tail long? why is a fox's tail bushy ?" The gentleman, who was a good deal out of countenance, said, " Why, Sir, you are so good, that I venture to trouble you.
Page 360 - Was this then the fate of that high-gifted man, " The pride of the palace, the bower and the hall, " The orator, — dramatist, — minstrel, — who ran " Through each mode of the lyre, and was master of all...
Page 41 - Evidences of Christianity ! I am weary of the word. Make a man feel the want of it ; rouse him, if you can, to the self-knowledge of his need of it ; and you may safely trust it to its own evidence, — remembering only the express declaration of Christ himself: No man cometh to me, unless the Father leadeth him.
Page 431 - I call God to record against the day we shall appear before our Lord Jesus, to give a reckoning of our doings, that I never altered one syllable of God's word against my conscience, nor would this day, if all that is in the earth, whether it be pleasure, honour, or riches, might be given me.
Page 429 - I defer to speak at this time and understood at the last not only that there was no room in my lord of London's palace to translate the new testament, but also that there was no place to do it in all England, as experience doth now openly declare.
Page 33 - The comic part of the character I might be equal to, but not the good, the enthusiastic, the literary. Such a man's conversation must at times be on subjects of science and philosophy, of which I know nothing ; or at least be occasionally abundant in quotations and allusions which a woman who, like me, knows only her own mother tongue, and has read little in that, would be totally without the power of giving.
Page 33 - Madam, wished to be allowed to ask you to delineate in some future work the habits of life, and character, and enthusiasm of a clergyman, who should pass his time between the metropolis and the country, who should be something like Beattie's Minstrel — Silent when glad, affectionate tho' shy, And in his looks was most demurely sad ; And now he laughed aloud, yet none knew why.