More Pages from a Journal: With Other PapersOxford University Press, 1910 - 303 pagina's |
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Pagina 20
... moral delinquency in the classes from which servants are drawn. They have no basis.' 'I understand,' said Mrs. Poulter, 'that Helen is a Dissenter.' Miss Taggart, as the reader has been told, was not particularly fond of Mrs. Poulter ...
... moral delinquency in the classes from which servants are drawn. They have no basis.' 'I understand,' said Mrs. Poulter, 'that Helen is a Dissenter.' Miss Taggart, as the reader has been told, was not particularly fond of Mrs. Poulter ...
Pagina 59
... moral code would in many quarters cause his com' mercial honesty to be suspected. You allege that you are sincere, but I can hardly acquit you of hypocrisy. Your sentimental excuse for deserting me is suspicious. When the document just ...
... moral code would in many quarters cause his com' mercial honesty to be suspected. You allege that you are sincere, but I can hardly acquit you of hypocrisy. Your sentimental excuse for deserting me is suspicious. When the document just ...
Pagina 135
... morally superior to my parishioners, and if I had put the question to myself I should have said with confidence that it was impossible that there should exist in me a weakness I had never suspected, one which every day moved me to ...
... morally superior to my parishioners, and if I had put the question to myself I should have said with confidence that it was impossible that there should exist in me a weakness I had never suspected, one which every day moved me to ...
Pagina 140
... morality that we crave companionship. It is in religion and in the deepest emotions that we thirst for it. Gradually he became wretched, and life was almost unbearable. She took no pleasure in the ancient place and its beautiful garden ...
... morality that we crave companionship. It is in religion and in the deepest emotions that we thirst for it. Gradually he became wretched, and life was almost unbearable. She took no pleasure in the ancient place and its beautiful garden ...
Pagina 177
... moral effect come when we have read him and re-read him and have traced every thread we can find, connecting him with his contemporaries. It is then, and then only, that we understand him and he becomes a living soul. Flesh and blood ...
... moral effect come when we have read him and re-read him and have traced every thread we can find, connecting him with his contemporaries. It is then, and then only, that we understand him and he becomes a living soul. Flesh and blood ...
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Antony’s asked AXMOUTH beautiful believe better Bicknoller Blackdeep blue Borachio called Charles Charlotte Bronte church Claudio Cleeve Abbey clouds Coleridge creatures dark daughter dear death definite difficulty dinner Eastcheap Esther excuse eyes father feel fields find fine finished fire first fit friends girl Goacher Godwin gone happiness hear heard heart Helen Hero HOMERTON hour husband infinite Jackman Kate knew lady Larkins live London look Lord Malvolio marriage married matter Melissa miles mind Miss Everard Miss Taggart Miss Toller moral morning mother Mudge Mudge’s Nether Stowey never night o’clock office once Othello passion perhaps person play Plutarch Poulter Radcliffe reason reflected religion replied satisfied Shakespeare soul sufficient Sunday talk tell thing Thirty-Nine Articles thought tion told took true truth walked wife wind window woman word Wordsworth worse