Essays by Divers Hands: Being the Transactions of the Royal Society of Literature, Band 20 |
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Seite 13
... effect . Such is the beneficial result in the physical and physiological fields - for instance , in the war against flood , fire and disease . But in the moral world , to explain the cause is often to condone the effect - for instance ...
... effect . Such is the beneficial result in the physical and physiological fields - for instance , in the war against flood , fire and disease . But in the moral world , to explain the cause is often to condone the effect - for instance ...
Seite 73
... effects , hardly suggests the inert . His apparent quietude more closely resembles that of snow upon the slopes of a ... effect on the reader is undoubtedly somewhat emetic , nowhere does it tend to be an aphrodisiac . " The judgment ...
... effects , hardly suggests the inert . His apparent quietude more closely resembles that of snow upon the slopes of a ... effect on the reader is undoubtedly somewhat emetic , nowhere does it tend to be an aphrodisiac . " The judgment ...
Seite 109
... effect . When he was quite a young man , and a poor strolling player , he and a comrade , tramping their way from one town to another in search of an engagement , hungry and footsore , asked a rustic who was working in a field to direct ...
... effect . When he was quite a young man , and a poor strolling player , he and a comrade , tramping their way from one town to another in search of an engagement , hungry and footsore , asked a rustic who was working in a field to direct ...
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action actor admirable angels artist audience beauty began Byzantine art called century character church classical Colet contemplation creature D.LITT delight disinterested dream emotion England English Erasmus wrote Erasmus's essay experience expression faculties feel flower friends Garrick genius George gift GORDON BOTTOMLEY Greek human humanist ideas imagination inspiration intellectual interpret John Colet JOHN MARTIN-HARVEY knowledge Latin Laurence Binyon learning legend less letter literary criticism literature living LL.D Lord Mountjoy Matthew Arnold means mind modern moral Mountjoy nature never ourselves passion perhaps poem poet poetic poetry Praise of Folly prose Puritan passion quiet reading Renaissance Robert Bridges scholar scientific seems Selwyn Image sense Shelley sleep soul speak spirit STEPHEN GASELEE sure Sabina things thought tion Tunstall verse and poetry verse-writer W. H. Hudson Warham whole words Wordsworth write