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Page 51
... hands of Mr. Palmer some rather grudging commendation . What Vanbrugh gives us is not the hot , confused and crowded ... hand to , from the writing of comedies to the building of castles . Luckily , too , he was able to keep his ...
... hands of Mr. Palmer some rather grudging commendation . What Vanbrugh gives us is not the hot , confused and crowded ... hand to , from the writing of comedies to the building of castles . Luckily , too , he was able to keep his ...
Page 130
... hand at a hero , Rushbrook , and she turns out a prig . Her humour is not faulty , but it is exceedingly slight . What an immortal figure the dim Mrs. Horton would have become in the hands of Jane Austen ! In Nature and Art her attempts ...
... hand at a hero , Rushbrook , and she turns out a prig . Her humour is not faulty , but it is exceedingly slight . What an immortal figure the dim Mrs. Horton would have become in the hands of Jane Austen ! In Nature and Art her attempts ...
Page 141
... hand ? and what dread feet ? So Blake engraved the verse ; and , as Mr. Sampson points out , ' the terrible , compressed force ' of the final line vanishes to nothing in the ' languid punctuation ' of subsequent editions : - ' What dread ...
... hand ? and what dread feet ? So Blake engraved the verse ; and , as Mr. Sampson points out , ' the terrible , compressed force ' of the final line vanishes to nothing in the ' languid punctuation ' of subsequent editions : - ' What dread ...
Contents
SHAKESPEARES FINAL PERIOD The Independent | 1 |
WORDS AND POETRY The Hogarth Press 1928 | 16 |
RABELAIS The New Statesman Feb 16 1918 CHARAC | 31 |
Copyright | |
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