The Living Age, Volumen236Living Age Company, 1903 |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 100
Página 14
... seems to us that the best days of the novel , as we have un- derstood the novel , are over . Prose fiction may throw itself with equal success into some other mould , though probably not till a period has gone by . The novel of the ...
... seems to us that the best days of the novel , as we have un- derstood the novel , are over . Prose fiction may throw itself with equal success into some other mould , though probably not till a period has gone by . The novel of the ...
Página 21
and modern upland of the Plateau de Langres , and seems at one time to have contemplated an alliance with the Moselle , for between Toul and Frouard their water - parting is low enough to be traversed by a canal . But the lat- ter river ...
and modern upland of the Plateau de Langres , and seems at one time to have contemplated an alliance with the Moselle , for between Toul and Frouard their water - parting is low enough to be traversed by a canal . But the lat- ter river ...
Página 22
... seems almost fortuitous , so slight is the separation between one part of the former river and the Aude . But we must not forget one other im- portant physical feature in Spanish geography - the Sierra Nevada , whose highest summit ...
... seems almost fortuitous , so slight is the separation between one part of the former river and the Aude . But we must not forget one other im- portant physical feature in Spanish geography - the Sierra Nevada , whose highest summit ...
Página 27
... seems , is what the French call an " extremely difficult " old lady . Not that she can be described as fickle ; on the contrary she is persistently and far too consistently unkind . In spite of her bright blue smile and the velvet ...
... seems , is what the French call an " extremely difficult " old lady . Not that she can be described as fickle ; on the contrary she is persistently and far too consistently unkind . In spite of her bright blue smile and the velvet ...
Página 28
... seems to be : " What is the use of having a voice if you can't use it ? " Nearly every animal of gregari- ous habits and the slightest pretension to any social gifts spends the greater part of the time in which he is in the society of ...
... seems to be : " What is the use of having a voice if you can't use it ? " Nearly every animal of gregari- ous habits and the slightest pretension to any social gifts spends the greater part of the time in which he is in the society of ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
admirable Alfred de Vigny Arctic fox asked ballads Barrows beauty birds called Carstairs century chaffinch Church Contrexéville dead door doubt English eyes face fact feel feet fire-walking Fortunata France garden give hand head heard heart hedge hour human idea interest Karuizawa knew Lady land less light LIVING AGE look Lord Lord Nelson matter ment Michele mind Moggy Monroe Doctrine morning nature never night Non-Jurors novel Olmet once Othello passed perhaps poet political present Prince Queen Queen Augusta race raven rock round seems side Sir Edmund Monson smile speak spirit stood story Taine telegraphy tell thing Thirl thought tion to-day Tobiah told took turned Vigny voice W. E. Cule walked whole woman words write young