Art, Literature, and the Drama |
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Page 27
... honor . The steel glove became his hand , and the spur his heel ; neither can we fancy him out of his place , for any place he would have made his own . But all this grace and dignity of the man of the world was in him subordinated to ...
... honor . The steel glove became his hand , and the spur his heel ; neither can we fancy him out of his place , for any place he would have made his own . But all this grace and dignity of the man of the world was in him subordinated to ...
Page 46
... honors of a demi - god . And , if Milton be not absolutely the greatest of human beings , it is hard to name one who combines so many features of God's own image , ideal grandeur , a life of spotless virtue , heroic endeavour and ...
... honors of a demi - god . And , if Milton be not absolutely the greatest of human beings , it is hard to name one who combines so many features of God's own image , ideal grandeur , a life of spotless virtue , heroic endeavour and ...
Page 58
... honor of being one of her sentinels there is sufficient for a life . But here again a broken thread - a beginning not followed up . He goes to India , and after that he was always to act with divided soul , and his life could be nothing ...
... honor of being one of her sentinels there is sufficient for a life . But here again a broken thread - a beginning not followed up . He goes to India , and after that he was always to act with divided soul , and his life could be nothing ...
Page 62
... honor . In other respects his morality was more useful than brilliant . But the virtue of the sentimental moralist is so over - precarious and ostentatious , that he can seldom be entitled to look down with contempt on the steady ...
... honor . In other respects his morality was more useful than brilliant . But the virtue of the sentimental moralist is so over - precarious and ostentatious , that he can seldom be entitled to look down with contempt on the steady ...
Page 117
... honor was the base On which the building of the Roman empire Was raised up to this height ; if , to inflame The ... honored in the sweat Of his twelve labors ; or a bold Camillus , Forbidding Rome to be redeemed with gold From the ...
... honor was the base On which the building of the Roman empire Was raised up to this height ; if , to inflame The ... honored in the sweat Of his twelve labors ; or a bold Camillus , Forbidding Rome to be redeemed with gold From the ...
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Common terms and phrases
admiration Alph Anto Antonio artist beauty Beethoven better brother calm character charm clavichord critic Dædalus deep delight divine drama earth expression eyes fair faith fancy feel felt Ferrara flowers genius gentle gifts give Goethe grace Handel happy harmony harpsichord Haydn hear heart heaven honor hope hour human John Sebastian leave Leon Leonora less light live look Lord Madame de Staël melody mind Mozart muse nature never noble o'er Paracelsus passion perfect Philip Van Artevelde picture play pleasure poems poet poetic poetry present prince princess Rome SCENE seek seems Senesino Sir James Mackintosh soul speak Speron Speroni spirit Strafford sweet sympathy Tasso taste tender thee thine things thou art thou hast thou wilt thought thyself tion tone true truth verse wish words Wordsworth worthy wouldst write youth