The Literary World, Bind 14S.R. Crocker, 1883 |
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Side 1
... Important Announcement ! Hawthorne's Works . RIVERSIDE EDITION . WORKS OF NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE . An entirely new edition from new electrotype plates , with Introduc- tory Notes by GEORGE P. LATHROP , author of " A Study of Hawthorne ...
... Important Announcement ! Hawthorne's Works . RIVERSIDE EDITION . WORKS OF NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE . An entirely new edition from new electrotype plates , with Introduc- tory Notes by GEORGE P. LATHROP , author of " A Study of Hawthorne ...
Side 13
... important biographies of our day . It has been compiled altogether from orig- inal material in the shape of letters , journals , and unpublished private papers left by Lord Lawrence . One of the most important features of the book will ...
... important biographies of our day . It has been compiled altogether from orig- inal material in the shape of letters , journals , and unpublished private papers left by Lord Lawrence . One of the most important features of the book will ...
Side 14
... important books of the present time . -- mus of Formularies and Elegancies , with illus- advancement to a weekly , at $ 3.50 per year . It trative passages from Shakespeare by Mrs. Pott has our congratulations and best wishes on and a ...
... important books of the present time . -- mus of Formularies and Elegancies , with illus- advancement to a weekly , at $ 3.50 per year . It trative passages from Shakespeare by Mrs. Pott has our congratulations and best wishes on and a ...
Side 16
... IMPORTANT WORK ON JAPANESE ART . 2. Japan : its Architecture , Art and Art Manufactures . 38th SEMI - ANNUAL STATEMENT OF THE THE CRITIC . TRAVELERS BY CHRISTOPHER DRESSER . Illustrated with upward of A two hundred engravings on wood ...
... IMPORTANT WORK ON JAPANESE ART . 2. Japan : its Architecture , Art and Art Manufactures . 38th SEMI - ANNUAL STATEMENT OF THE THE CRITIC . TRAVELERS BY CHRISTOPHER DRESSER . Illustrated with upward of A two hundred engravings on wood ...
Side 31
... important Articles , which their well - known Grammat cal WOOD'S PLANT RECORD , for analyzing and recording learning makes peculiarly valuable . specimens as gathered . 60 cents . WOOD'S BOTANICAL APPARATUS . viz . , Press , Trowel , et ...
... important Articles , which their well - known Grammat cal WOOD'S PLANT RECORD , for analyzing and recording learning makes peculiarly valuable . specimens as gathered . 60 cents . WOOD'S BOTANICAL APPARATUS . viz . , Press , Trowel , et ...
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Side 194 - O, for my sake do you with Fortune chide, The guilty goddess of my harmful deeds, That did not better for my life provide Than public means which public manners breeds. Thence comes it that my name receives a brand, And almost thence my nature is subdued To what it works in, like the dyer's hand...
Side 64 - Muses' anvil ; turn the same (And himself with it) that he thinks to frame, Or, for the laurel, he may gain a scorn; For a good poet's made, as well as born. And such wert thou ! Look how the father's face Lives in his issue, even so the race Of Shakespeare's mind and manners brightly shines In his well turned, and true filed lines ; In each of which he seems to shake a lance, As brandished at the eyes of ignorance.
Side 70 - In the course of this narrative much is written of wars, conspiracies, and rebellions ; of Presidents, of Congresses, of embassies, of treaties, of the ambition of political leaders, and of the rise of great parties in the nation. Yet the history of the people is the chief theme. At every stage of the splendid progress which separates the America of Washington and Adams from the America in which we live, it has been the author's purpose to describe the dress, the occupations, the amusements, the...
Side 105 - ... of manners and morals ; to trace the growth of that humane spirit which abolished punishment for debt, and reformed the discipline of prisons and of jails ; to recount the manifold improvements which, in a thousand ways, have multiplied the conveniences of life and ministered to the happiness of our race ; to describe the rise and progress of that long series of mechanical inventions and discoveries which is now the admiration of the world, and our just pride and boast ; to tell how, under the...
Side 220 - A Roundel is wrought as a ring or a starbright sphere, With craft of delight and with cunning of sound unsought, That the heart of the hearer may smile if to pleasure his ear A roundel is wrought.
Side 256 - The mole's dim curtain, and the lynx's beam: Of smell, the headlong lioness between, And hound sagacious on the tainted green; Of hearing, from the life that fills the flood, To that which warbles through the vernal •wood; The spider's touch, how exquisitely fine! Feels at each thread, and lives along the line...
Side 96 - I should like to have the Academy of Letters propose a prize for an essay on Shakespeare's poem, Let the bird of loudest lay, and the Threnos with which it closes, the aim of the essay being to explain, by a historical research into the poetic myths and tendencies of the age in which it was written, the frame and allusions of the poem.
Side 271 - Now when the dead man come to life beheld His wife his wife no more, and saw the babe Hers, yet not his, upon the father's knee, And all the warmth, the peace, the happiness, And his own children tall arid beautiful, And him, that other, reigning in his place, Lord of his rights and of his children's love, — Then he, tho...
Side 194 - Our Tarlton was master of his faculty. When Queen Elizabeth was serious (I dare not say sullen) and out of good humour, he could undumpish her at his pleasure. Her highest favourites would, in some cases, go to Tarlton before they would go to the queen, and he was their usher to prepare their advantageous access unto her. In a word, he told the queen more of her faults than most of her chaplains, and cured her melancholy better than all of her physicians.
Side 268 - On one occasion Mr. Charles Lloyd met them slowly pacing together a little footpath in Hoxton fields, both weeping bitterly, and found, on joining them, that they were taking their solemn way to the accustomed asylum...