The National ReviewW.H. Allen, 1886 - Great Britain |
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Page 13
It is not exactly according to the self - preservative law of nature that married women , with husbands and little children to live for , should imperil their lives by riding to hounds , and run the risk of breaking their necks twice or ...
It is not exactly according to the self - preservative law of nature that married women , with husbands and little children to live for , should imperil their lives by riding to hounds , and run the risk of breaking their necks twice or ...
Page 555
gious nature , and then , sometimes , a few words spoken with the insight which poets possess , would entirely remove some of the troublesome stumbling - blocks which his young hearers , in the course of their cogitations , had not been ...
gious nature , and then , sometimes , a few words spoken with the insight which poets possess , would entirely remove some of the troublesome stumbling - blocks which his young hearers , in the course of their cogitations , had not been ...
Page 825
Nature is looked at by Barnes , as by the Greeks , in her pure simplicity ; as the picture which surrounds us ; as the scenery and background of human life , not in the modern mode of which Wordsworth , Shelley , and others have given ...
Nature is looked at by Barnes , as by the Greeks , in her pure simplicity ; as the picture which surrounds us ; as the scenery and background of human life , not in the modern mode of which Wordsworth , Shelley , and others have given ...
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