The Student: A Series of Papers, Volume 1Baudry's European Library, 1835 - 245 pages |
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Page 35
... charm is his foibles . " What a description by the most sentimental of mothers , of the most talented , the most interesting of young men . Nugent was thunderstruck ; the party swept by ; he was undiscovered . He raved , he swore , he ...
... charm is his foibles . " What a description by the most sentimental of mothers , of the most talented , the most interesting of young men . Nugent was thunderstruck ; the party swept by ; he was undiscovered . He raved , he swore , he ...
Page 68
... charm of the place ; and no undue magnificence diverts you from the main thought of the genius to which it is consecrated . The grounds are natural , but not remarkable . A very narrow but fresh streamlet borders them to the right . I ...
... charm of the place ; and no undue magnificence diverts you from the main thought of the genius to which it is consecrated . The grounds are natural , but not remarkable . A very narrow but fresh streamlet borders them to the right . I ...
Page 69
... charm . How tender and how characteristic that thought of hers , that if any happiness chanced to her after her father's death , " it was to his mediation she owed it : " as if he were living ! To her he was living - in heaven ! Peace ...
... charm . How tender and how characteristic that thought of hers , that if any happiness chanced to her after her father's death , " it was to his mediation she owed it : " as if he were living ! To her he was living - in heaven ! Peace ...
Page 72
... charm of Rousseau is not in the characters he draws , but in the sentiments he attributes to them . I lose the individuality of the characters - I forget , I dismiss them . I take the sen- timents , and find characters of my own more ...
... charm of Rousseau is not in the characters he draws , but in the sentiments he attributes to them . I lose the individuality of the characters - I forget , I dismiss them . I take the sen- timents , and find characters of my own more ...
Page 85
... charm- they bring us closer under the healing wings of our Guardian Spirit . And , fools that we are , we imagine this sympathy is to endure for ever . But TIME - there is the divider ! -by little and little , we grow apart from each ...
... charm- they bring us closer under the healing wings of our Guardian Spirit . And , fools that we are , we imagine this sympathy is to endure for ever . But TIME - there is the divider ! -by little and little , we grow apart from each ...
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Common terms and phrases
admiration Adolphe affection Alcibiades ambition amidst Athens beautiful behold blank verse breath Byron Celeste character Charlotte Lennox charm Childe Harold Colonel conversation dark death desire divine dreams earth English eternal eyes face fancy feel felt Ferdinand Fitzroy Ferney Fi-ho-ti gaze genius Glaucus glory grave Gregory Jones hand handsome happy heart heaven honour hope human humour imagination immortal intellect knowledge labour lady laughed less live lofty looked Lucy luxury Madame Madame de Stael man-the melancholy mind moral nature never Night Thoughts Nugent objects once ourselves passed passion perhaps Phædo philosopher Phylias Pirith Plato pleasure poem poet poetry Polybius poor possessed round Rousseau satiety seemed sentiment Shakspeare smile Socrates solemn soul spirit sublime sympathy Tacitus thee things thou true truth vanity virtue voice Voltaire vulgar walk weariness wisdom wise wonderful writings young youth