The Silver Domino, Or, Side Whispers, Social and LiteraryLamley and Company, 1893 - 365 páginas |
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Página 15
... believe - I may be wrong that Arson is not a very common crime with any class . It is not of such frequent occur- rence as murder or bigamy - or if it is , it does not attract so much attention . So I fancy it may be taken for granted ...
... believe - I may be wrong that Arson is not a very common crime with any class . It is not of such frequent occur- rence as murder or bigamy - or if it is , it does not attract so much attention . So I fancy it may be taken for granted ...
Página 25
... believe it is true that ladies of high rank and good education are obliged to be taught ( three lessons for one guinea ) how to make a proper obeisance to the Queen . And the lesson is , I presume , too cheap to include any training in ...
... believe it is true that ladies of high rank and good education are obliged to be taught ( three lessons for one guinea ) how to make a proper obeisance to the Queen . And the lesson is , I presume , too cheap to include any training in ...
Página 44
... believe , a " little moral , " i.e. , a copy - book maxim , that we should fall in love with our neighbour's wife . But that is just precisely the most delightful among our modern fashionable amusements . Our neighbour's wife is the ...
... believe , a " little moral , " i.e. , a copy - book maxim , that we should fall in love with our neighbour's wife . But that is just precisely the most delightful among our modern fashionable amusements . Our neighbour's wife is the ...
Página 56
... believe that on one occasion Moses was so angry that he broke the tablets on which they were graven . This was mere temper on the part of Moses ; he should have known better . He should have spared the tablets , and broken the ...
... believe that on one occasion Moses was so angry that he broke the tablets on which they were graven . This was mere temper on the part of Moses ; he should have known better . He should have spared the tablets , and broken the ...
Página 64
... believe it any more than I believe that the wretches who flung themselves under the car of Juggernaut went straight to heaven . The most curious and awful part of the whole spectacle to me is to realise that all this movement , clamour ...
... believe it any more than I believe that the wretches who flung themselves under the car of Juggernaut went straight to heaven . The most curious and awful part of the whole spectacle to me is to realise that all this movement , clamour ...
Términos y frases comunes
admiration Andrew ANDREW LANG Athenæum believe bless bogies bones boom brain called Calmour charming creature critics curb chain curious dear dream Elephant England English eyes Fairy fame feel fellow genius George Meredith Gladstone Grand Old GRANT ALLEN groovy Hall Caine heart heaven Hodge honest honour humour idea imagine journal Journalist's Creed Kipling lady laugh literary literature little morals live look Lord LORD SALISBURY magazines manner matter Meredith neighbour's never noble novels o'er once opinion Pall Mall Pall Mall Gazette pious publisher poems poets polite praise Princess of Thule Review rhyme Robert Elsmere Rudyard RUDYARD KIPLING Silver Domino skeleton smile social society sort soul stand staring stories Struldbrug style Swinburne tell Tennyson thee things thought Thucydides truth utterance verse vulgar wild woman women wonder word write young
Pasajes populares
Página 337 - Who, both by precept and example, shows That prose is verse, and verse is merely prose...
Página 239 - As love came close to you, breast to breast. 1 shall never be friends again with roses ; I shall loathe sweet tunes, where a note grown strong Relents and recoils, and climbs and closes, As a wave of the sea turned back by song. There are sounds where the soul's delight takes fire, Face to face with its own desire ; A delight that rebels, a desire that reposes ; I shall hate sweet music my whole life long.
Página 333 - Elegy! — have at you all! I, too, can scrawl, and once upon a time I poured along the town a flood of rhyme, A schoolboy freak, unworthy praise or blame ; I printed — older children do the same. Tis pleasant, sure, to see one's name in print ; A Book's a Book, altho
Página ix - I thank you heartily for your kind letter and welcome gift. You do well not to care for fame. Modern fame is too often a mere crown of thorns, and brings all the vulgarity of the world upon you. I sometimes wish I had never written a line.
Página 150 - My lord," said the prisoner, unmoved in voice or in manner, unless it might be that both expressed more decision and energy than he had shown during any other part of the trial ; " my lord, I am now a condemned man, but if I stood with the rope about my neck, ready to die, I would not exchange...
Página 239 - ... love is, And tremble and turn and be changed? Content you; The gate is strait; I shall not be there. But you, had you chosen, had you stretched hand, Had you seen good such a thing were done, I too might have stood with the souls that stand...
Página ii - All lh;u he has to tell us is told with wonderful verve and in an easy flowing style which has a great charm for all who can appreciate such satire. ... I could dwell upon the ' Silver Domino ' with great benefit to my readers and satisfaction to myself, but space forbids ; so I will only say that the book is the most valuable contribution to our satirical literature that has appeared for many, many years.
Página ii - If it is to Mr. Lang's generosity that we owe the hatching of this book, that gentleman must assuredly stand aghast." — Vanity Fair, Oct. 29th. " The literary puzzle of the hour is — Who wrote the
Página 269 - Indian empire, and how it is ruled and defended and fought for every day against all the Powers of Darkness, we desire respectfully to recommend to the Secretary for India that he should place no sheaves of despatches in the royal hands, but Mr. Rudyard Kipling's books. There are only two volumes of them, besides sundry small brochures. A good bulky conscientious three-volume novel holds as many words.
Página 146 - ... cleaving green slime, free! and the roaring stopped; the world looked flat, foreign, a place of crusty promise. His wreck, animated by the dim strange fish below, appeared fairer ; it winked lurefully when abandoned. The internal state of a gentleman who detested intangible metaphor as heartily as the vulgarest of our gobble-gobbets hate it, metaphor only can describe ; and for the reason, that he had in him just something more than is within the compass of the language of the meat-markets. He...