| Alexander Hay Japp - 1877 - 380 sider
...many shapes. The person, the rank, the age, the scenical position, all varied themselves for ever; but the same leading traits more or less faintly remained...woman, and of some shadowy malice which withdrew her from restoration and from hope. Such is the explanation which I offer why that particular addition... | |
| Thomas De Quincey - 1878 - 350 sider
...many shapes. The person, the rank, the age, the scenical position, all varied themselves for ever; but the same leading traits more or less faintly remained...particular addition, which some of my friends had been authorised to look for, has not in the main been given, nor for the present could be given; and, secondly,... | |
| Thomas De Quincey - 1890 - 494 sider
...many shapes. The person, the rank, the age, the scenical position, all varied themselves for ever ; but the same leading traits more or less faintly remained...particular addition which some of my friends had been authorised to look for has not in the main been given, nor for the present could be given ; and, secondly,... | |
| Thomas De Quincey - 1898 - 282 sider
...many shapes. The person, the rank, the age, the scenical position, all varied themselves for ever ; but the same leading traits more or less faintly remained...which withdrew her, or attempted to withdraw her, from 35 restoration and from hope. Such is the explanation which I offer why that particular addition which... | |
| Lane Cooper - 1902 - 90 sider
...the repeated presence in the dreams of the Confessions, of a person with "the same leading traits ... of a lost Pariah woman , and of some shadowy malice...to withdraw her, from restoration and from hope," — a presence due, we are to understand, to the memory of "Ann of Oxford Street", who befriended him,... | |
| 1857 - 872 sider
...all varied themselves forever ; but the same leading traits more or less faintly remained of a bet Pariah woman, and of some shadowy malice which withdrew...restoration and from hope. Such is the explanation which I ofler why that particular addition, which some of my friends had been authorized to look for, has not... | |
| Andrew Smith - 2004 - 202 sider
...many shapes. The person, the rank, the age, the scenical position, all varied themselves for ever; but the same leading traits more or less faintly remained...attempted to withdraw her, from restoration and from hope. (p. 139) The failed pursuit of the lost woman thus conditions the failure of rationality. By becoming... | |
| |