The Living Age, Volume 236Living Age Company, 1903 |
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Page vii
... Present Condition of . By Charles Headlam 256 · 43 Among the Millet . By Archibald · Lampınan 320 At an Outpost . By Henry Woolley 576 At Eventide . By Arthur Christo- Grandmother's Gift , A. By R. C. Lehmann 576 • pher Benson 192 ...
... Present Condition of . By Charles Headlam 256 · 43 Among the Millet . By Archibald · Lampınan 320 At an Outpost . By Henry Woolley 576 At Eventide . By Arthur Christo- Grandmother's Gift , A. By R. C. Lehmann 576 • pher Benson 192 ...
Page 2
... present . " From the Minerva Press in Leaden- hall Street , " says Mr. Raleigh ( and the " Edinburgh Review , " noticing " Del- phine , " bears him out by a contemptu- ous reference to this same institution ) , " romances poured forth ...
... present . " From the Minerva Press in Leaden- hall Street , " says Mr. Raleigh ( and the " Edinburgh Review , " noticing " Del- phine , " bears him out by a contemptu- ous reference to this same institution ) , " romances poured forth ...
Page 3
... to carry abroad and into the past something of that noticing eye which makes the present living and significant , and to blend , as Shake- speare did , romance and comedy , high life and The English Novel in the Nineteenth Century . 3.
... to carry abroad and into the past something of that noticing eye which makes the present living and significant , and to blend , as Shake- speare did , romance and comedy , high life and The English Novel in the Nineteenth Century . 3.
Page 10
... present- outlandish scenes of violent action ; and he resented the necessity of relating these scenes to a love - story . Adventure appeared to him as a mistress to be courted for her own beaux yeux- " the bright eyes of danger , " as ...
... present- outlandish scenes of violent action ; and he resented the necessity of relating these scenes to a love - story . Adventure appeared to him as a mistress to be courted for her own beaux yeux- " the bright eyes of danger , " as ...
Page 11
... present there is all the freedom that can fairly be desired . One may reasonably argue that men and women have at last come to recognize that the novel is the dominant literary form , that the novelist may quite conceiv- ably have his ...
... present there is all the freedom that can fairly be desired . One may reasonably argue that men and women have at last come to recognize that the novel is the dominant literary form , that the novelist may quite conceiv- ably have his ...
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