Tait's Edinburgh Magazine, Volumen1William Tait, Christian Isobel Johnstone W. Tait, 1834 |
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Página 20
... fact , not as a circumstance of exclusive elegance belonging to my father's establishment , but for the very op- posite reason , as belonging very generally to my father's class . Many of them possessed collec- tions much finer than his ...
... fact , not as a circumstance of exclusive elegance belonging to my father's establishment , but for the very op- posite reason , as belonging very generally to my father's class . Many of them possessed collec- tions much finer than his ...
Página 21
... fact the pleasure naturally attached to the sense of a difficulty overcome . - Not only were there in my father's library , no books except English ; but even amongst those there were none connected with the Black Letter literature ...
... fact the pleasure naturally attached to the sense of a difficulty overcome . - Not only were there in my father's library , no books except English ; but even amongst those there were none connected with the Black Letter literature ...
Página 28
... fact of his was sensible that it did not become me to oc- Majesty's very general acquaintance with Eng- cupy the King's attention with any long stories lish literature . Not a day passed , whenever the or traditions about a subject so ...
... fact of his was sensible that it did not become me to oc- Majesty's very general acquaintance with Eng- cupy the King's attention with any long stories lish literature . Not a day passed , whenever the or traditions about a subject so ...
Página 35
... fact , not be so good . You will not have the luxuries of life ; and you must not eat the bread of idleness . You must labour ; and , moreover , you must labour according to certain rules , and under a certain degree of restraint . The ...
... fact , not be so good . You will not have the luxuries of life ; and you must not eat the bread of idleness . You must labour ; and , moreover , you must labour according to certain rules , and under a certain degree of restraint . The ...
Página 38
... fact is as plain as a pike- staff . Whether we take the chaos multitude that throng the city thoroughfares , all bustle and con- fusion , the subdued repose of patrician squares , the obscure filth - crowded alley , the princely terrace ...
... fact is as plain as a pike- staff . Whether we take the chaos multitude that throng the city thoroughfares , all bustle and con- fusion , the subdued repose of patrician squares , the obscure filth - crowded alley , the princely terrace ...
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