Poetical Works of Sir Walter Scott, Bart, Volumen1A. and C. Black, 1895 |
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Página viii
... land . His grandfather was bred to the sea , he became a farmer , brought up his son , Scott's father , as an attorney ( Writer to the Signet ) , and the Writer married a lady of the Rutherford family . Looking back along the line , we ...
... land . His grandfather was bred to the sea , he became a farmer , brought up his son , Scott's father , as an attorney ( Writer to the Signet ) , and the Writer married a lady of the Rutherford family . Looking back along the line , we ...
Página x
... land . All these emotions endured to the very last , and mingled in the delirium of his death - bed . His one expedition at Rome Iwas made to the tomb of the last Stuarts . Those seeds of opinion had taken root before Scott was four ...
... land . All these emotions endured to the very last , and mingled in the delirium of his death - bed . His one expedition at Rome Iwas made to the tomb of the last Stuarts . Those seeds of opinion had taken root before Scott was four ...
Página xxiii
... land . " To the present reviewer , as he has said , the octosyllabics of The Lady of the Lake seem monotonous , and he prefers the varied measures of the Lay . Scott , however , defended the measure , as more favourable to narrative ...
... land . " To the present reviewer , as he has said , the octosyllabics of The Lady of the Lake seem monotonous , and he prefers the varied measures of the Lay . Scott , however , defended the measure , as more favourable to narrative ...
Página xxiv
... so Once more , he made it his ideal to be the father and friend of all the people on his estate : to all men there on . He began by want- As wealth accrued , He bought land as a he spoke " as if he were of their blood xxiv INTRODUCTION.
... so Once more , he made it his ideal to be the father and friend of all the people on his estate : to all men there on . He began by want- As wealth accrued , He bought land as a he spoke " as if he were of their blood xxiv INTRODUCTION.
Página xxv
... lands . These three motives carried him beyond his own common - sense ; he was intoxicated by his triumph , he reckoned the fairy gold of Constable's bills as real bullion . It was almost the solitary error of a life unexampled for the ...
... lands . These three motives carried him beyond his own common - sense ; he was intoxicated by his triumph , he reckoned the fairy gold of Constable's bills as real bullion . It was almost the solitary error of a life unexampled for the ...
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