From Goldsmith to Landor: Essays and ConversationsVere Henry Collins |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 21
Page 20
... mean ? ' ' I ken what I mean well enough , ' replied the other ; ' she's washing your twa shirts at the next door , because ' ' Fire and fury , no more of thy stupid explana- tions , ' cried he ; ' go and inform her we have got company ...
... mean ? ' ' I ken what I mean well enough , ' replied the other ; ' she's washing your twa shirts at the next door , because ' ' Fire and fury , no more of thy stupid explana- tions , ' cried he ; ' go and inform her we have got company ...
Page 113
... means , it would be selfish and wicked . It is the very little more that we allow ourselves beyond what the actual poor ... mean the veriest poor of all , but persons as we were , just above poverty . ' I know what you were going to say ...
... means , it would be selfish and wicked . It is the very little more that we allow ourselves beyond what the actual poor ... mean the veriest poor of all , but persons as we were , just above poverty . ' I know what you were going to say ...
Page 134
... mean will be quite clear to the reader , who must soon perceive great inexperience , immaturity , and every error ... means - but the next passage is more intelligible . ' The two first Books , and indeed the two last , I feel sensible ...
... mean will be quite clear to the reader , who must soon perceive great inexperience , immaturity , and every error ... means - but the next passage is more intelligible . ' The two first Books , and indeed the two last , I feel sensible ...
Contents
INTRODUCTION | 5 |
OLIVER GOLDSMITH | 11 |
An Evening at Vauxhall | 27 |
Copyright | |
3 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
Albert Durer appeared Battle of Hexham beauty bell better Bruce called character CHARLES LAMB China cinquepace companion confess cries Cromwell curtain dear death delight Edmund Blunden Edward Endymion English essay fancy feel fine madness flavour forget French garden give green hath Hazlitt hear heart Ho-ti idea idleness imagination journey Keats Kentish Town king lady Lamb Landor laugh Leigh Hunt less Letter-Bell live London look Lord manner Margate Maria Linley mean mind nature never night Noble object OLIVER GOLDSMITH once ourselves parasangs passed play pleasure poet poor present pretty queen reason Reculvers remember seemed seen sense sentiment sight soldier sound spirit sweet talk tell tender thee Theophrastus things thought Tibbs tion town vanity voyage walk Wallace Walter WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR watch whole WILLIAM HAZLITT young