Museum of Foreign Literature and Science, Volumen5Robert Walsh, Eliakim Littell, John Jay Smith E. Littell, 1824 |
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Página 92
... hope of speedy remunera- tion , perhaps even the poet may have one eye to the stars and the other on the dust ; and , while he aspires to earn a fame among the immortals , he may , like Mammon , admire the rich ore which veins the earth ...
... hope of speedy remunera- tion , perhaps even the poet may have one eye to the stars and the other on the dust ; and , while he aspires to earn a fame among the immortals , he may , like Mammon , admire the rich ore which veins the earth ...
Página 145
... hope of leading him ultimately to a better way of thinking . I had hesitated too long : I found him far advanced in his convalescence . My arguments are not worth repeating . He replied thus : " I change my mistresses as Tom Southern ...
... hope of leading him ultimately to a better way of thinking . I had hesitated too long : I found him far advanced in his convalescence . My arguments are not worth repeating . He replied thus : " I change my mistresses as Tom Southern ...
Página 283
... hope to penetrate this , however trifling it might appear , as silently as they had done the first , they proceeded by one sudden effort to force it open , and by the rapidity of their subsequent movements , to terrify the garrison from ...
... hope to penetrate this , however trifling it might appear , as silently as they had done the first , they proceeded by one sudden effort to force it open , and by the rapidity of their subsequent movements , to terrify the garrison from ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Museum of Foreign Literature and Science, Volumen5 Robert Walsh,Eliakim Littell,John Jay Smith Vista completa - 1824 |
Museum of Foreign Literature and Science, Volumen14 Robert Walsh,Eliakim Littell,John Jay Smith Vista completa - 1829 |
Museum of Foreign Literature and Science, Volumen1 Robert Walsh,Eliakim Littell,John Jay Smith Vista completa - 1822 |
Términos y frases comunes
admiration American amusing appeared Asmodeus Attalus beauty better Cæsar called character Church coal gas Coke court death Duke Elwes England English eyes father favour feeling French friends genius gentleman Gil Blas give Greek hand heart honour humour imagination interest Jews justice kind king king's labour lady Lady Morgan late LAURENCE STERNE Le Sage less literary literature lived look Lord Byron Lord Cochrane majesty manner matter merit mind Mirabeau Naples nation nature never night observed occasion once opinion party passed passion perhaps person pleasure poet political possessed present published racter reader Roman Rome Rossini Sage Salvator Rosa satire scene seems Sir Edward Coke Smollett soon speak spirit Sterne story talents thee thing thou thought tion Tom Jones truth whole words write young