The Bookman, Том 34Dodd, Mead and Company, 1912 |
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Страница 3
... stands almost alone . But more closely , more intimately in touch with native life is Mr. A. J. W. Dawson's African Nights ' Entertainment , with its crude brutality , its primitive passion , its unfor- gettable tragedy . And from the ...
... stands almost alone . But more closely , more intimately in touch with native life is Mr. A. J. W. Dawson's African Nights ' Entertainment , with its crude brutality , its primitive passion , its unfor- gettable tragedy . And from the ...
Страница 5
... stand , since she already won some little reputation as a novelist over her own signature . She comes of an old Irish family , tracing her descent from a cer- tain famous dean , the Very Reverend Thomas Graves of Ardfert and Connor ...
... stand , since she already won some little reputation as a novelist over her own signature . She comes of an old Irish family , tracing her descent from a cer- tain famous dean , the Very Reverend Thomas Graves of Ardfert and Connor ...
Страница 11
... stand- ard ( you know what I mean ) and who dares talk of having any virtue at all ? For instance Forster says After a scene with Blifil , the air is cleared by a laugh of Tom Jones - Why Tom Jones in my holding is as big a rogue as ...
... stand- ard ( you know what I mean ) and who dares talk of having any virtue at all ? For instance Forster says After a scene with Blifil , the air is cleared by a laugh of Tom Jones - Why Tom Jones in my holding is as big a rogue as ...
Страница 17
... stand the character of a man who could show such timidity over a dog's bite that had not even drawn blood and who had gone post - haste to Lucerne to have the imaginary wound cauterised . The next day when Villiers returned , Wagner ...
... stand the character of a man who could show such timidity over a dog's bite that had not even drawn blood and who had gone post - haste to Lucerne to have the imaginary wound cauterised . The next day when Villiers returned , Wagner ...
Страница 45
... stand for the Prince . Mr. Stoddard wrote of Mrs. Burnett that her pathos was such that he was not ashamed to show the tears that it wrung from him . But the pathos of Little Lord Fauntleroy is the pathos of sheer happi- ness . The old ...
... stand for the Prince . Mr. Stoddard wrote of Mrs. Burnett that her pathos was such that he was not ashamed to show the tears that it wrung from him . But the pathos of Little Lord Fauntleroy is the pathos of sheer happi- ness . The old ...
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50 cents American Appleton artist Barbara Worth beautiful Bennett Bobbs-Mer Bohemia Book Supply Broad Highway Brown called cents Century character Charles Common Law Company criticism Deland Dickens Dodd Doran Doubleday drama England English fact Farnol Fauntleroy FICTION France French friends George girl Graustark Harper Harrison Harvester heart Henry hero Houghton Mif Houghton Mifflin interest Iron Woman John Johnston Kennedy Square Kester Lady letters literary Little Lord Fauntleroy living London Long Roll look magazine marriage married Mead ment mind mother Ne'er-Do-Well never NON-FICTION NON-FICTION JUVENILES novel novelist oleomargarine play present Prodigal Judge published Putnam Queed reader Reilly & Britton Richard Meynell rill Scrib Scribner Secret Garden seems Stokes story Stratton-Porter tell Thackeray thing thought tion verse volume wife Winning of Barbara women words Wright writing written York young