Essays on Social Subjects: From the Saturday ReviewW. Blackwood and Sons, 1864 - 305 páginas |
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Página 21
... recognised as such , remains a comfortable life - long companion ; the ignorance , emphatically , of the vulgar , that " blind and naked ignorance " which " Delivers brawling judgments unashamed On all things all day long , " because ...
... recognised as such , remains a comfortable life - long companion ; the ignorance , emphatically , of the vulgar , that " blind and naked ignorance " which " Delivers brawling judgments unashamed On all things all day long , " because ...
Página 22
... recognised on all hands for what it really is , yet held in high esteem as an engine of coquetry and as a conscious fascination . A pretty or a charming woman feels herself more pretty and more charming for not knowing anything hard ...
... recognised on all hands for what it really is , yet held in high esteem as an engine of coquetry and as a conscious fascination . A pretty or a charming woman feels herself more pretty and more charming for not knowing anything hard ...
Página 23
... recognise what a shameful thing it is not to know more . Then to stand convicted before our fellow - men of not knowing certain facts , of having perpetrated some gross blunder in what is assumed to be a common heritage of knowledge ...
... recognise what a shameful thing it is not to know more . Then to stand convicted before our fellow - men of not knowing certain facts , of having perpetrated some gross blunder in what is assumed to be a common heritage of knowledge ...
Página 40
... recognise his fitness for the part in a general want of force and stamina , and a predominance of the imagination over the judgment . Though we call it hard names , it would still be al- most a discourtesy to assume our readers to be ...
... recognise his fitness for the part in a general want of force and stamina , and a predominance of the imagination over the judgment . Though we call it hard names , it would still be al- most a discourtesy to assume our readers to be ...
Página 56
... recognised as a fault , or , rather , has all along been classed among the virtues , is scarcely likely to be eradi- cated . As we review all the fluent , complacent , me- chanical utterances within our experience , certainly a sense of ...
... recognised as a fault , or , rather , has all along been classed among the virtues , is scarcely likely to be eradi- cated . As we review all the fluent , complacent , me- chanical utterances within our experience , certainly a sense of ...
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99 | |
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Palavras e frases frequentes
acquaintances action Adam Bede ALEXANDER KEITH JOHNSTON amused attention Author character Charles Lamb choice cloth conscious constancy contempt course Crown 8vo DAVID PAGE disagreeable things doubt Dr Johnson dull dulness Engravings experience expression eyes fact false shame Fcap feeling folly fool foolish friends friendship GEORGE ELIOT give habit heart History hugger-mugger human idea ignorance indulge influence instinct intercourse interest JOHN GALT JOHN HILL BURTON JOHN TULLOCH judgment labour live look means memory ment mind mistakes moral motives nature never notion ourselves pain perhaps persons pleasure prejudices Professor qualities realise reason recognise reserve SAMUEL WARREN scenes Scotland SCOTT BURN Second Edition sense shirk SIR ARCHIBALD ALISON snub social society sort spirit stand sure sympathy talk taste tell temper THOMAS AIRD thought tion truth vanity vols weak wise words
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Página 9 - CONTENTS : — Church Music, and other Parochials. — Medical Attendance, and other Parochials.— A few Hours at Hampton Court.— Grandfathers and Grandchildren.— Sitting for a Portrait. — Are there not Great Boasters among us ?— Temperance and Teetotal Societies.— Thackeray's Lectures: Swift. —The Crystal Palace. — Civilisation: The Census. — The Beggar's Legacy.
Página 303 - When I was running about this town a very poor fellow, I was a great arguer for the advantages of poverty ; but I was, at the same time, very sorry to be poor.
Página 131 - See the same man, in vigour, in the gout ; Alone, in company ; in place, or out ; Early at business, and at hazard late ; Mad at a fox-chase, wise at a debate ; Drunk at a borough, civil at a ball ; Friendly at Hackney, faithless at Whitehall.