The Bookman, Volume 14Dodd, Mead and Company, 1902 |
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Page x
... stand for freedom , England's Lion attained a yet prouder position in the estimation of the nations of the earth . Lady Matilda de Wick is for years secretly engaged to Prince Rupert . Jane Swaffam is happily betrothed to Lord Cluny ...
... stand for freedom , England's Lion attained a yet prouder position in the estimation of the nations of the earth . Lady Matilda de Wick is for years secretly engaged to Prince Rupert . Jane Swaffam is happily betrothed to Lord Cluny ...
Page 12
... stand in line ; and when your turn came you borrowed a copy of the newspaper for thirty minutes , the time needed to read the daily instalment of M. Sue's romance . Conditions have changed ; nowadays there are no such things as limited ...
... stand in line ; and when your turn came you borrowed a copy of the newspaper for thirty minutes , the time needed to read the daily instalment of M. Sue's romance . Conditions have changed ; nowadays there are no such things as limited ...
Page 13
... stand- ing " in a high and solitary place , " and belonging to no school , " certainly not to any English school . The sincerest form of flattery in any admirer cannot imitate and cannot even caricature him . There is truly nothing ...
... stand- ing " in a high and solitary place , " and belonging to no school , " certainly not to any English school . The sincerest form of flattery in any admirer cannot imitate and cannot even caricature him . There is truly nothing ...
Page 19
... stands upon a bluff to the west of North Broadway . Mr. Yeatman was twice married , first to Miss Angelica Thompson , a Virginia lady , and some years after her death to Miss Cynthia Pope , a sister of General John Pope , who lost the ...
... stands upon a bluff to the west of North Broadway . Mr. Yeatman was twice married , first to Miss Angelica Thompson , a Virginia lady , and some years after her death to Miss Cynthia Pope , a sister of General John Pope , who lost the ...
Page 49
... standing , of all the nuances in his sub- jects , is witness for a claim I would make for parody - namely , that it takes the very keenest insight , the most calm analysis , the firmest judgment , to produce One cannot parody genuine ...
... standing , of all the nuances in his sub- jects , is witness for a claim I would make for parody - namely , that it takes the very keenest insight , the most calm analysis , the firmest judgment , to produce One cannot parody genuine ...
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