The Bookman, Volume 14Dodd, Mead and Company, 1902 |
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Page 12
... mind was divided between revolution and barricades , and the next batch of adven- tures that were to befall M. de Monte Cristo or Rudolph , the Grand Duke of Gerolstein . The story of the tremendous vogue of Eugène Sue's two great ...
... mind was divided between revolution and barricades , and the next batch of adven- tures that were to befall M. de Monte Cristo or Rudolph , the Grand Duke of Gerolstein . The story of the tremendous vogue of Eugène Sue's two great ...
Page 13
... mind , not by any means in any subject , even though his satiric dissection of what he has called ' the ignobly decent ' showed his strength , and , indirectly , his inner character . His very repugnance to his early subjects led him to ...
... mind , not by any means in any subject , even though his satiric dissection of what he has called ' the ignobly decent ' showed his strength , and , indirectly , his inner character . His very repugnance to his early subjects led him to ...
Page 16
... mind the heat . He holds the world's record in moun- taineering , having beaten all the previous records by no less than five hundred feet , the altitude he reached being twenty- three thousand four hundred and ninety feet . Besides ...
... mind the heat . He holds the world's record in moun- taineering , having beaten all the previous records by no less than five hundred feet , the altitude he reached being twenty- three thousand four hundred and ninety feet . Besides ...
Page 21
... this class belong the innumerable imitations . of of Hamlet's Soliloquy , Longfellow's " Hiawatha , " and Tennyson's " Locksley Hall " -the broad burlesquing , in short , of any poem which has sunk into the mind of SOME AMERICAN PARODISTS.
... this class belong the innumerable imitations . of of Hamlet's Soliloquy , Longfellow's " Hiawatha , " and Tennyson's " Locksley Hall " -the broad burlesquing , in short , of any poem which has sunk into the mind of SOME AMERICAN PARODISTS.
Page 22
... mind a string of versified platitudes by Southey , entitled " The Old Man's Comforts , and How He Gained Them ; " Wordsworth is directly satirised in the inimitable tale of the old man sitting on a gate ; and " The Three Voices , " in ...
... mind a string of versified platitudes by Southey , entitled " The Old Man's Comforts , and How He Gained Them ; " Wordsworth is directly satirised in the inimitable tale of the old man sitting on a gate ; and " The Three Voices , " in ...
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