Art, Literature, and the Drama |
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Page 21
... seen in the distance with your tablets all ready to write them into prose . CRITIC . O my brother , my benefactor , do not thus repel me . Interpret me rather to our common mother ; let her not avert her eyes from a younger child . I ...
... seen in the distance with your tablets all ready to write them into prose . CRITIC . O my brother , my benefactor , do not thus repel me . Interpret me rather to our common mother ; let her not avert her eyes from a younger child . I ...
Page 22
... seen ? What by giving a technical classification to what is already as- similated with the mental life ? CRITIC . What is gained by living at all ? POET . Beauty loving itself , -Happiness ! CRITIC . Does not this involve consciousness ...
... seen ? What by giving a technical classification to what is already as- similated with the mental life ? CRITIC . What is gained by living at all ? POET . Beauty loving itself , -Happiness ! CRITIC . Does not this involve consciousness ...
Page 29
... seen , the embrace was eager and affectionate as that of the brother and the child . " Let us not return at once , " said Lord Herbert . " I had al- ready waited for you long , and have seen all the beauties of the parsonage and church ...
... seen , the embrace was eager and affectionate as that of the brother and the child . " Let us not return at once , " said Lord Herbert . " I had al- ready waited for you long , and have seen all the beauties of the parsonage and church ...
Page 53
... seen to disregard the precepts or ex- ample of his father ; and it is a matter of surprise if the scion is found to bear fruit of a similar , not to say equal flavor , with the parent tree . How opposed all this is to our natural wishes ...
... seen to disregard the precepts or ex- ample of his father ; and it is a matter of surprise if the scion is found to bear fruit of a similar , not to say equal flavor , with the parent tree . How opposed all this is to our natural wishes ...
Page 56
... seen into the very depths of Hall's nature . There is no pity , no flattery - no ill - advised application of the wise counsels of calm hours and untried spirits , but that noble and sincere faith , which might have created beneath the ...
... seen into the very depths of Hall's nature . There is no pity , no flattery - no ill - advised application of the wise counsels of calm hours and untried spirits , but that noble and sincere faith , which might have created beneath 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