The National Review, Volume 19W.H. Allen, 1892 - English literature |
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Page 50
... feeling cannot be flatly gainsaid when they point at the angler the scornful finger of humaneness . Angling does involve cruelty . It is cruel to the worm , to the maggot , to the frog ; and , as " the lowliest insect feels a pang as ...
... feeling cannot be flatly gainsaid when they point at the angler the scornful finger of humaneness . Angling does involve cruelty . It is cruel to the worm , to the maggot , to the frog ; and , as " the lowliest insect feels a pang as ...
Page 869
... feeling and thinking which belongs to the time we are portraying , but only into something nearly approaching it , we shall then invent stories and imagine scenes which are not quite like real life but which yet come very close to it ...
... feeling and thinking which belongs to the time we are portraying , but only into something nearly approaching it , we shall then invent stories and imagine scenes which are not quite like real life but which yet come very close to it ...
Page 870
... feeling which was our original inspiring power in working , shall not be utterly repug- nant to that feeling . If it should be so , then our work is conceived in a mood which is not allowed to dominate it throughout . And so it will not ...
... feeling which was our original inspiring power in working , shall not be utterly repug- nant to that feeling . If it should be so , then our work is conceived in a mood which is not allowed to dominate it throughout . And so it will not ...
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