Critical and Miscellaneous Essays, Volume 4Brown and Taggard, 1860 |
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Pagina 13
... morning after breakfast he has stepped down to the innermost workshop , before sallying out ; stands there with his laced three - cor- nered hat , cane under arm ; drawing - on his gloves with nod , with nasal - guttural word , he gives ...
... morning after breakfast he has stepped down to the innermost workshop , before sallying out ; stands there with his laced three - cor- nered hat , cane under arm ; drawing - on his gloves with nod , with nasal - guttural word , he gives ...
Pagina 30
... morning - goes forth to hunt again . Behold Cardalion King of Urinals ; with a woful ballad to his mistress ' eyebrow ! He blows out , Wer- ter - wise , his foolish existence , because she will not have it to keep ; - heeds not that ...
... morning - goes forth to hunt again . Behold Cardalion King of Urinals ; with a woful ballad to his mistress ' eyebrow ! He blows out , Wer- ter - wise , his foolish existence , because she will not have it to keep ; - heeds not that ...
Pagina 54
... of men ! -- Of which spider - web stray tatters , in favourable dewy mornings , even yet become visible . 1 See Lamotte ; see Gay d'Oliva . 6 - The Demoiselle d'Oliva ? She is a Parisian Demoiselle of 54 MISCELLANIES .
... of men ! -- Of which spider - web stray tatters , in favourable dewy mornings , even yet become visible . 1 See Lamotte ; see Gay d'Oliva . 6 - The Demoiselle d'Oliva ? She is a Parisian Demoiselle of 54 MISCELLANIES .
Pagina 83
... morning ' ( of Monday , September 3 ) , writes Maton , the * grate that led to our quarter was again opened . Four men in uniform , ' holding each a naked sabre and blazing torch , mounted to our corridor ; ' a turnkey showing the way ...
... morning ' ( of Monday , September 3 ) , writes Maton , the * grate that led to our quarter was again opened . Four men in uniform , ' holding each a naked sabre and blazing torch , mounted to our corridor ; ' a turnkey showing the way ...
Pagina 102
... morning the Arrighettis had to go , and men had to say , " They are gone , these villains ! They are gone , these mar- tyrs ! " the little boy listening with interest . Let the boy become a man , and he too shall have to go ; and prove ...
... morning the Arrighettis had to go , and men had to say , " They are gone , these villains ! They are gone , these mar- tyrs ! " the little boy listening with interest . Let the boy become a man , and he too shall have to go ; and prove ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Critical and Miscellaneous Essays: Collected and Republished ... Thomas Carlyle Volledige weergave - 1867 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
answer Assumpcion Baillie better Boehmer brave Buffière called century Countess Duke Earth English eyes fact father fixed-idea France Francia Frederick French Revolution Gabriel Georgel Gervase Markham Goethe Guachos hand head heart Heaven High-Sherriffe History Holles honour House human Isle of Rhé John the Steadfast Kilwinning kind King Kunz labour Lamotte Lettre de Cachet lived Long Parliament look Lord manner matter Mémoires ment Mirabeau Monseigneur Nature Necklace never night noble old Marquis once Pailly Palais Royal Paraguay Paris perhaps persons Poll Pontarlier poor Portraits Prince Rahel reader Rengger rest Riquetti Robertson Roger North Rohan Saverne Saxon Scott seems Sir Philip Parker Sir Roger North soul speak Strafford strong thee things thou thought tion Varnhagen Vengeur Versailles Volumes Waverley Novels whole withal word worth write young
Populaire passages
Pagina 448 - ... in all my poor Historical investigations it has been, and always is, one of the most primary wants to procure a bodily likeness of the personage inquired after; a good Portrait if such exists; failing that, even an indifferent if sincere one. In short, any representation, made by a faithful human creature, of that Face and Figure, which he saw with his eyes, and which I can never see with mine, is now valuable to me, and much better than none at all.
Pagina 449 - ... man this or the other vague historical name can have been, will, as the first and directest indication of all, search eagerly for a portrait, for all the reasonable portraits there are; and never rest till he have made out, if possible, what the man's natural face was like. Often I have found a portrait superior in real instruction to half a dozen written
Pagina 238 - We might say in a short word, which means a long matter, that your Shakspeare fashions his characters from the heart outwards ; your Scott fashions them from the skin inwards, never getting near the heart of them ! The one set become living men and women ; the other amount to little more than mechanical cases, deceptively painted automatons.
Pagina 232 - Mr. Mackenzie, at this time in the 70th year of his age, with a white hat turned up with green, green spectacles, green jacket, and long brown leathern gaiters buttoned upon his nether anatomy, wore a dog.whistle round his neck, and had, all over, the air of as resolute a devotee as the gay captain of Huntly Burn.
Pagina 209 - In those days," says the Memorandum before me, " advocates were not so plenty — at least about Liddesdale ;" and the worthy Sheriff-substitute goes on to describe the sort of bustle, not unmixed with alarm, produced at the first farm-house they visited (Willie Elliot's at Millburnholm), when the honest man was informed of the quality of one of his guests.
Pagina 189 - For there is no heroic poem in the world but is at bottom a biography, the life of a man : also, it may be said, there is no life of a man, faithfully recorded, but is a heroic poem of its sort, rhymed or unrhymed.
Pagina 229 - A hard and harsh countenance — eyes far sunk under projecting eyebrows, which were grizzled like his hair— a wide mouth, furnished from ear to ear with a range of unimpaired teeth, of uncommon whiteness, and a size and breadth which might have become the jaws of an ogre, completed this delightful portrait.
Pagina 210 - ... and, moreover, with considerable libations of whiskypunch, manufactured in a certain wooden vessel, resembling a very small milkpail, which he called ' Wisdom,' because it ' made ' only a few spoonfuls of spirits, — though he had the art of replenishing it so adroitly, that it had been celebrated for fifty years as more fatal to sobriety than any bowl in the parish. Having done due honour to ' Wisdom,' they again mounted, and proceeded over moss and moor to some other equally hospitable master...
Pagina 250 - ... now is, with what it has been not long since, I think my heart will break. Lonely, aged, deprived of my family — All but poor Anne ; an impoverished, an embarrassed man, deprived of the sharer of my thoughts and counsels, who could always talk down my sense of the calamitous apprehensions which break the heart that must bear them alone. Even her foibles were of service to me, by giving me things to think of beyond my weary self-reflections.
Pagina 229 - Scott had recovered his bodily vigour, and none more so than Constable, who, as he puffed and panted after him, up one ravine and down another, often stopped to wipe his forehead, and remarked, that " it was not every author who should lead him such a dance.