Osbright's prudence forbade his taking so dangerous a step, especially when the discourse of his mistress convinced him how deeply engraved, and how odious in their nature, were the prejudices attached to the name of Frankheim in the minds of the inmates... Romantic Tales - Page 83by Matthew Gregory Lewis - 1808 - 12 pagesFull view - About this book
| Susanne Stark - 2000 - 488 pages
...Gustavus' Unschuld am Mord des kleinen Joscelyn gelangt" (p. 16). But does Osbright's forensic rationality ["Educated himself at the court of Bamberg. his heart...found prevailing throughout his father's domains" - Mistrust, p. 83] deserve to be elevated into a prime factor distinguishing Lewis from Kleist? After... | |
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