The Last Essays of EliaJ.M. Dent and Company, 1903 - 277 pages |
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Page xliv
... brought to him by Coleridge . And none of them missed , then or later . His friends became many , and amongst them were men of marked intellectual and moral character ; men often mutually repellent , and of an engrossing and emphatic ...
... brought to him by Coleridge . And none of them missed , then or later . His friends became many , and amongst them were men of marked intellectual and moral character ; men often mutually repellent , and of an engrossing and emphatic ...
Page liii
... brought the brother and sister together into the hearts and heads of new generations of the old and young . Before the close of that year another joint book was published - again in William Godwin's Juvenile Library — namely " Mrs ...
... brought the brother and sister together into the hearts and heads of new generations of the old and young . Before the close of that year another joint book was published - again in William Godwin's Juvenile Library — namely " Mrs ...
Page 23
... brought together in a common school ) and the boys whose paternal residence was on the plain ; a sufficient cause of hostility in the code of these young Grotiuses . My father had been a leading Mountaineer ; and would still maintain ...
... brought together in a common school ) and the boys whose paternal residence was on the plain ; a sufficient cause of hostility in the code of these young Grotiuses . My father had been a leading Mountaineer ; and would still maintain ...
Contents
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS | x |
HeadpieceBlakesmoor | 5 |
The terror of luckless poacher | 13 |
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acquaintance admirable appeared April Fool artist beauty Bernard Barton better brother called character Charles Lamb child Christ's Hospital Coleridge confess day's pleasuring dear dreams Elliston Essays of Elia face faculty fancy father feeling genius gentle gentleman George Dyer give guests half hand head heart honour hope hour human humour imagination Inner Temple intellectual John Lamb kind knew lady Lamb's late less literary literature lived London Magazine look Margate Mary Mary Lamb mind moral morning nature never night occasion once passion perhaps person play pleasant pleasure Poems poor present Reader reason Robert William Elliston scarce seemed seen sense sight Sir Philip Sydney sister Sonnets sort speak spirit sure sweet Temple thee things thou thought tion told true truth whole wonder words writing young