Blackwood's Magazine, Volume 186William Blackwood, 1909 - England |
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Page 3
... the limelight - and the perverse sublimity which must be grandiloquent about pedes- trian matters . To these the of definition indeed . largely in Leigh Hunt without a slight feeling of nausea 1909. ] The Deacon of the Craft . 3.
... the limelight - and the perverse sublimity which must be grandiloquent about pedes- trian matters . To these the of definition indeed . largely in Leigh Hunt without a slight feeling of nausea 1909. ] The Deacon of the Craft . 3.
Page 4
largely in Leigh Hunt without a slight feeling of nausea . The ordinary person , who is not a Cockney any more than he is a Superman , cannot view the whole of life from a parlour- window . Besides , he does not like to feel doubts as ...
largely in Leigh Hunt without a slight feeling of nausea . The ordinary person , who is not a Cockney any more than he is a Superman , cannot view the whole of life from a parlour- window . Besides , he does not like to feel doubts as ...
Page 7
... feeling for the simple and spacious qualities of art , with fire and imagination in him , who in some dark freak condemns himself to play with petty counters , using all the while the rules and speech of the greater game . He wants to ...
... feeling for the simple and spacious qualities of art , with fire and imagination in him , who in some dark freak condemns himself to play with petty counters , using all the while the rules and speech of the greater game . He wants to ...
Page 9
... feeling is in favour of the criminals and that law must keep pace with popular feeling . His legisla- tive measures show no appreci- ation of the permanent needs of the country ; they are so many sops flung to so many clamorous factions ...
... feeling is in favour of the criminals and that law must keep pace with popular feeling . His legisla- tive measures show no appreci- ation of the permanent needs of the country ; they are so many sops flung to so many clamorous factions ...
Page 12
... feels its strangeness . Now war must be abhorrent to every serious man , but the grounds of this horror are are important . It is properly hate- ful because of its misery and waste ; it is defensible only as a grave necessity - the ...
... feels its strangeness . Now war must be abhorrent to every serious man , but the grounds of this horror are are important . It is properly hate- ful because of its misery and waste ; it is defensible only as a grave necessity - the ...
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Common terms and phrases
able Allerton Ambrose arms Army asked ball better British Byblos called captain CLXXXVI.—NO Cockney command course door duty England English eyes fact French give Goble Government Hafiz Ullah Haider Haliburton hand Havildar head heard heart Henry Home Office honour horse House House of Lords Hughie Hughie's India Indian Army Joan Joey King knew lady land Leroy look Lord Lord Kitchener Lord Rosebery Marrable matter Maud ment military mind Miss Gaymer morning native ness never Neville Chamberlain night officers once Orinoco passed pirates play ponies present Punjab regiment replied rifle round Royle Scotland seemed sent ship side Sikh soldier stood Subedar tell Territorial Force thing thought tion Tiptoft to-day told took troops turned voice Wanlock Wenamon words young