Blackwood's Magazine, Volumen 186W. Blackwood, 1909 |
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Página 3
... his deft- ness of fancy , his humour , his instinet for poetry ; and yet we defy the most resolute admirer of Cookneyism to read largely in Leigh Hunt without a slight feeling of nausea 1909. ] 3 The Deacon of the Craft .
... his deft- ness of fancy , his humour , his instinet for poetry ; and yet we defy the most resolute admirer of Cookneyism to read largely in Leigh Hunt without a slight feeling of nausea 1909. ] 3 The Deacon of the Craft .
Página 4
largely in Leigh Hunt without a slight feeling of nausea . The ordinary person , who is not a Cockney any more than he is a Superman , cannot view the whole of life from a parlour- window . Besides , he does not like to feel doubts as ...
largely in Leigh Hunt without a slight feeling of nausea . The ordinary person , who is not a Cockney any more than he is a Superman , cannot view the whole of life from a parlour- window . Besides , he does not like to feel doubts as ...
Página 7
... feeling for the simple and spacious qualities of art , with fire and imagination in him , who in some dark freak condemns himself to play with petty counters , using all the while the rules and speech of the greater game . He wants to ...
... feeling for the simple and spacious qualities of art , with fire and imagination in him , who in some dark freak condemns himself to play with petty counters , using all the while the rules and speech of the greater game . He wants to ...
Página 9
... feeling is in favour of the criminals and that law must keep pace with popular feeling . His legisla- tive measures show no appreci- This , then , is one of the notable marks of the tempera- ment , the incapacity to under- stand primary ...
... feeling is in favour of the criminals and that law must keep pace with popular feeling . His legisla- tive measures show no appreci- This , then , is one of the notable marks of the tempera- ment , the incapacity to under- stand primary ...
Página 12
... feels its strangeness . Now war must be abhorrent to every serious man , but the grounds of this horror are important . It is properly hate- ful because of its misery and waste ; it is defensible only as a grave necessity- the alter ...
... feels its strangeness . Now war must be abhorrent to every serious man , but the grounds of this horror are important . It is properly hate- ful because of its misery and waste ; it is defensible only as a grave necessity- the alter ...
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461 | |
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491 | |
508 | |
516 | |
541 | |
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673 | |
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725 | |
735 | |
755 | |
769 | |
781 | |
793 | |
804 | |
810 | |
826 | |
843 | |
857 | |
870 | |
873 | |
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