The Eclectic Magazine of Foreign Literature, Science, and Art, Volume 1;Volume 64Leavitt, Trow, & Company, 1865 |
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Página 37
... manner in which they greeted them on their return , there was too striking a dif- ference to escape the notice of the young men . Peppa treated Matteo more coldly and formally than she had ever done before , and Magallon's proud lover ...
... manner in which they greeted them on their return , there was too striking a dif- ference to escape the notice of the young men . Peppa treated Matteo more coldly and formally than she had ever done before , and Magallon's proud lover ...
Página 40
... manner and with perfect con- fidence : " Well , since you ask me the question , I will tell you what you must learn one of these days . You remember the French count - he was called St. Elme- whom we met every evening on the promenade ...
... manner and with perfect con- fidence : " Well , since you ask me the question , I will tell you what you must learn one of these days . You remember the French count - he was called St. Elme- whom we met every evening on the promenade ...
Página 42
... manner . He has become identified , at least for a time , with interests not his own , and he must have abandoned himself with some degree of sympathy and unreserve to the feelings and thoughts which the progress of the story naturally ...
... manner . He has become identified , at least for a time , with interests not his own , and he must have abandoned himself with some degree of sympathy and unreserve to the feelings and thoughts which the progress of the story naturally ...
Página 43
... manner which no other living author has done . Much of his phraseol- ogy has become common property . Al- lusions to his works and quotations from them are made by everybody , and in all places . If Sir Edward Bulwer had never written a ...
... manner which no other living author has done . Much of his phraseol- ogy has become common property . Al- lusions to his works and quotations from them are made by everybody , and in all places . If Sir Edward Bulwer had never written a ...
Página 44
... manner of speaking out of the simple and plain way ( such as reason teacheth and show- eth things by ) which by a pretty sur- prising uncouthness or conceit of expres- * Sermon xiv . of the passages themselves , which are admirable , as ...
... manner of speaking out of the simple and plain way ( such as reason teacheth and show- eth things by ) which by a pretty sur- prising uncouthness or conceit of expres- * Sermon xiv . of the passages themselves , which are admirable , as ...
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admirable appear arms artist assignats beautiful called cavalry character Charles Lamb Christian church color daugh death Duke England English eyes fact father feeling France Frankton French Girondists give Gneisenau Goethe Hamlet hand head heart honor hope horses human hundred interest Ireland Italy kind king lady land less light living look Lord Lord Derby Louis XVI Madame Madame Roland manner Marie Antoinette Martin Chuzzlewit ment mind moral nation nature never noble Normandy once Orvieto painted Paris passed perhaps person poem poet poetry political present Prince queen Rashleigh readers Roman Rome Russian scarcely scene Sebastopol seems Serapeum sion soul speak spirit style Sunniside tain things thought thousand tion took true truth ture verse whole words write young