New Monthly Magazine, and Universal Register, Volume 32Thomas Campbell, Samuel Carter Hall, Edward Bulwer Lytton Baron Lytton, Theodore Edward Hook, Thomas Hood, William Harrison Ainsworth, William Ainsworth Henry Colburn, 1831 |
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Page 187
... literary leisure are Tremaine's " vision of felicity : " but retire- ment is only another word for dulness , and literary leisure is very far from having the enjoyment of literary employment . To convert the sceptic from vague and ...
... literary leisure are Tremaine's " vision of felicity : " but retire- ment is only another word for dulness , and literary leisure is very far from having the enjoyment of literary employment . To convert the sceptic from vague and ...
Page 433
... literary merit succeed in the House , and one reason is that they are commonly too fastidious . They who have been studying the niceties of language all their lives , dislike to rush into the bold current of extemporaneous speaking - of ...
... literary merit succeed in the House , and one reason is that they are commonly too fastidious . They who have been studying the niceties of language all their lives , dislike to rush into the bold current of extemporaneous speaking - of ...
Page 546
... literary distinction may be clombe by all ; but to women especially it would seem that the ascent should be rendered smooth and easy . The heart - burnings and jealousies that we feel towards rivals of our own sex , we can scarcely ...
... literary distinction may be clombe by all ; but to women especially it would seem that the ascent should be rendered smooth and easy . The heart - burnings and jealousies that we feel towards rivals of our own sex , we can scarcely ...
Contents
Cholera Morbus What is its nature? In what manner ought it to | 13 |
Ode to the Ourangoutangs at the Egyptian Hall | 20 |
Sonnet By William Wordsworth To B R Haydon Composed | 26 |
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