The National ReviewW.H. Allen, 1886 - Great Britain |
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Page 574
Before concluding , I feel that I must apologize for presuming to impose upon you , and upon the readers of the National Review , a letter written in a language which is totally foreign to me , and which I know to possess but most ...
Before concluding , I feel that I must apologize for presuming to impose upon you , and upon the readers of the National Review , a letter written in a language which is totally foreign to me , and which I know to possess but most ...
Page 627
“ I only feel , ” he wrote with strange indelicacy , in 1822 , to John Gisborne ( who , by the way , soon after became one of his monsters ) , “ the want of those who can feel and understand me . Whether from proximity and the ...
“ I only feel , ” he wrote with strange indelicacy , in 1822 , to John Gisborne ( who , by the way , soon after became one of his monsters ) , “ the want of those who can feel and understand me . Whether from proximity and the ...
Page 775
Some of his friends , especially Wordsworth , who had no bookish feeling about him , thought that Southey's love of books ... Looking over what I have written , I feel how impossible it is to represent the finest features of Southey's ...
Some of his friends , especially Wordsworth , who had no bookish feeling about him , thought that Southey's love of books ... Looking over what I have written , I feel how impossible it is to represent the finest features of Southey's ...
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