... pages were read, at once pronounced it to be Miss Martineau's production ; and concluded that you knew all about it, and caused it to be sent hither. In some of its most eloquent parts it stops short of their wishes and expectations ; but they all... Harriet Martineau - Página 122por Florence Fenwick Miller - 1884 - 224 páginasVista completa - Acerca de este libro
| Henry Crabb Robinson - 1869 - 628 páginas
...their wishes and expectations ; but they all agree that it is a rare book, doing honour to the head and heart of your able and interesting friend. Mr....wish I had read exactly such a book as that years ago !" I ought to add, that they had not finished the volume — had only got about half through it —... | |
| Henry Crabb Robinson - 1869 - 578 páginas
...their wishes and expectations ; but they all agree that it is a rare book, doing honor to the head and heart of your able and interesting friend. Mr....earnestness — than is usual with him. The serene and heavenly minded Miss Fenwick was prodigal of her admiration. But Mrs. Wordsworth's was the crowning... | |
| Henry Crabb Robinson - 1869 - 616 páginas
...their wishes and expectations ; but they all agree that it is a rare book, doing honour to the head and heart of your able and interesting friend. Mr....praised it with more unreserve — I may say, with more carnestnessthan is usual with him. The serene and heavenlyminded Miss Fenwick was prodigal of her admiration.... | |
| William Henry Davenport Adams - 1884 - 242 páginas
...their wishes and expectations ; but they all agree that it is a rare book, doing honour to the head and heart of your able and interesting friend. Mr....was the crowning praise. She said — and you know exactly how she would say it — " I wish I had read exactly such a book as that years ago !" . . .... | |
| William Wordsworth - 1907 - 546 páginas
...of our wishes and expectations; but they all agree that it is a rare book, doing honour to the head and heart of your able and interesting friend. Mr....serene and heavenly-minded Miss Fenwick was prodigal in her admiration. But Mrs. Wordsworth's was the crowning praise. She said — and you know how she... | |
| Henry Crabb Robinson, William Wordsworth - 1927 - 582 páginas
...(he Fjord and The Crqfton Boys, in her own day her Life in the Sick Room, (praised by Wordsworth ' with more unreserve — I may say, with more earnestness — than is usual with him ', QuiUinan toH.CB,9 Dec. 1843,) Household Education, and the account of her travels in Egypt were... | |
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