| Charles Bray - 1883 - 352 pages
...they are disposed to credit. Our thoughts and feelings are greatly influenced by those with whom they come in contact, and especially by those with whom...entirely upon the character of the women he was with, end upon their predominating brain development. Shelley was equally sensitive. Medwin, writing of him,... | |
| John Keats - Poets, English - 1883 - 416 pages
...; my hands are in my pockets, I am free from all suspicion, and comfortable. When I am among women, I have evil thoughts, malice, spleen ; I cannot speak,...therefore listen to nothing ; I am in a hurry to be gone. You must be charitable, and put all this perversity to my being disappointed since my boyhood. Yet... | |
| John Keats - Poets, English - 1883 - 426 pages
...; my hands are in my pockets, I am free from all suspicion, and comfortable. When I am among women, I have evil thoughts, malice, spleen ; I cannot speak,...therefore listen to nothing ; I am in a hurry to be gone. You must be charitable, and put all this perversity to my being disappointed since my boyhood. Yet... | |
| Sir Sidney Colvin - Poets, English - 1887 - 252 pages
...; my hands are in my pockets, I am free from all suspicion, and comfortable. When I am among women I have evil thoughts, malice, spleen; I cannot speak,...therefore listen to nothing; I am in a hurry to be gone. ... I must absolutely get over this — but how ?" fy^. (je cc**** "*. <3 G_ l/w^c\ . In a fine passage... | |
| William Michael Rossetti - 1887 - 246 pages
...company; I commit a crime with her which absence would not have known. . . . When I am among women I have evil thoughts, malice, spleen ; I cannot speak...therefore listen to nothing; I am in a hurry to be gone. You must be charitable, and put all this perversity to my being dis10 appointed since my boyhood. .... | |
| Sir Sidney Colvin - 1887 - 256 pages
...comfortable. When I am among women, I have evil thoughts, malice, c. tt. K spleen; I cannot speak, or ba silent; I am full of suspicions, and therefore listen to nothing; I am in a hurry to be gone.... I must absolutely get over this—but how 1" In a fine passage of a letter to his relatives in America,... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray IV, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero - English literature - 1888 - 572 pages
...months before, he had expressed his disinclination for female society. 'Among women,' he says, ' 1 have evil thoughts, malice, spleen. I cannot speak,...therefore listen to nothing ; I am in a hurry to be gone.' To this feeling the sense of his almost dwarfish height no doubt contributed. ' After all,' he adds,... | |
| John Keats - Poets, English - 1889 - 546 pages
...beyond the strength of any other in the family. She was never abased by them — never complained." cannot speak, or be silent ; I am full of suspicions,...therefore listen to nothing ; I am in a hurry to be gone. You must be charitable, and put all this perversity to my being disappointed since my boyhood. Yet... | |
| George Edward Woodberry - English poetry - 1890 - 320 pages
...was a soft nest in which some one of them slept, though she knew it not. . . . When I am among women, I have evil thoughts, malice, spleen ; I cannot speak...therefore listen to nothing ; I am in a hurry to be gone. You must be charitable, and put all this perversity to my being disappointed since my boyhood. Yet... | |
| John Keats - 1891 - 412 pages
...— my hands are in my pockets, I am free from all suspicion and comfortable. When I am among women, I have evil thoughts, malice, spleen — I cannot...listen to nothing — I am in a hurry to be gone. You must be charitable and put all this perversity to my being disappointed since my boyhood. Yet with... | |
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