The Sewanee Review, Volume 7University of the South, 1899 - American fiction |
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Page 2
... century , the possibility and opportunity for which have only recently dawned upon the human mind . Its full revelations are for the generations yet to be . Won- derful indeed , and full of deep significance already , are the results of ...
... century , the possibility and opportunity for which have only recently dawned upon the human mind . Its full revelations are for the generations yet to be . Won- derful indeed , and full of deep significance already , are the results of ...
Page 3
... century which is now closing . Buried cities have been resurrected ; languages , dead so many centuries that their alphabets , grammars , and relationships to other tongues were lost and forgotten , have been brought to light and ...
... century which is now closing . Buried cities have been resurrected ; languages , dead so many centuries that their alphabets , grammars , and relationships to other tongues were lost and forgotten , have been brought to light and ...
Page 33
... century , forgot- ten in the eighteenth , unheard of in the nineteenth . Unheard of , that is , by any one but Hugo , who is able to cover many sheets with this precious knowledge of his . George Brandes has said that the best burlesque ...
... century , forgot- ten in the eighteenth , unheard of in the nineteenth . Unheard of , that is , by any one but Hugo , who is able to cover many sheets with this precious knowledge of his . George Brandes has said that the best burlesque ...
Page 34
... century . Still more laughable is a Latin footnote to the name of Bishop Hugo of Besançon , of whom it is told in the text that he made the cell in which Claude Frollo pur- sued his gloomy ponderings . The footnote contains just . these ...
... century . Still more laughable is a Latin footnote to the name of Bishop Hugo of Besançon , of whom it is told in the text that he made the cell in which Claude Frollo pur- sued his gloomy ponderings . The footnote contains just . these ...
Page 37
... one walks alone in the nighttime through a forest without trembling . In the midst of the deluge of abstract speculation that has worked such irreparable havoc in nineteenth century litera- ture and Victor Hugo's Novels . 37 iv.
... one walks alone in the nighttime through a forest without trembling . In the midst of the deluge of abstract speculation that has worked such irreparable havoc in nineteenth century litera- ture and Victor Hugo's Novels . 37 iv.
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admirable Africa American Arnold Catullus century character Chattanooga Chaucer China Church comedies Cressida critic economic England English essay fact feel fetich fiction France Frederic Harrison French genius George Meredith German give Goethe Greek hand heart Holberg Hugo Hugo's human Iago ideas influence intellectual interest Kongo Latin leisure Letters literary literature lived Macmillan Madame Marianne Marivaux matter Matthew Arnold ment Meredith mind modern Molière moral NASHVILLE nature never novel Pandarus passions Patten perhaps philosophical poems poet poetic poetry political possess present prose race reader religion religious Russia sentiment SEWANEE Shakspere Shelley Shylock Smith Premier social soul South Carolina spirit Stonewall Jackson story style sure Tartuffe TENN things thought tion to-day Troilus Troilus and Cressida true University Vere verse volume William Rowan Hamilton words writes