| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero - 1905 - 846 pages
...and high walls, their box-edgings, balls of holly, and statues,' On the contrary, he wonders that jv people who ' resembled us so little in their taste should resemble us in anything else.' In these limitations Cowper was essentially a man of the prosaic, matterof-fact eighteenth... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero - 1905 - 690 pages
...walls, their box-edgings, balls of holly, and yew-tree statues,' On the contrary, he wonders that ft people who ' resembled us so little in their taste should resemble us in anything else.' In these limitations Cowper was essentially a man of the prosaic, matterof-fact eighteenth... | |
| William Cowper - 1912 - 556 pages
...gardens and high walls, their box-edgings, balls of holly, and yew-tree statues, are become so VOL. JG entirely unfashionable now, that we can hardly believe...sewed up the slashed sleeve, and reduced the large trunk hose to a neat pair of silk stockings, has left human nature just where it found it. The inside... | |
| Edwin Almiron Greenlaw, William Harris Elson, Christine M. Keck - 1923 - 648 pages
...honeysuckles, their little gardens and high walls, their box-edgings, balls of holly, and yew-tree statues are become so entirely unfashionable now that we can hardly...so little in their taste should resemble us in any- so thing else. But in everything else, I suppose, they were our counterparts exactly; and time, that... | |
| Frederick Alexander Manchester, William Frederic Giese - 1926 - 928 pages
...honeysuckles, their little gardens and high walls, their box-edgings, balls of holly, and yew-tree statues, are become so entirely unfashionable now, that we can...us so little in their taste, should resemble us in anything else. But in everything else, I suppose, they were our counterparts exactly; and time, that... | |
| Frederick Alexander Manchester, William Frederic Giese - 1926 - 924 pages
...honeysuckles, their little gardens and high walls, their box-edgings, balls of holly, and yew-tree statues, are become so entirely unfashionable now, that we can...us so little in their taste, should resemble us in anything else. But in everything else, I suppose, they were our counterparts exactly; and time, that... | |
| Edwin Almiron Greenlaw, William Harris Elson, Christine M. Keck - 1928 - 650 pages
...who resembled us so little in their taste should resemble us in any- so thing else. But in everything else, I suppose, they were our counterparts exactly;...sewed up the slashed sleeve and reduced the large trunk hose to a neat pair of silk stockings, has left human nature just where it found it. The inside... | |
| 1820 - 684 pages
...honeysuckles, their little gardens and high walls, their bos.edgings, balls of holly, and yewtree st-Mui's, are become so entirely unfashionable now, that we can...possible, that a people, who resembled us so little ill Ibeir taste, should resemble us in any tiling else. But in every tliiug else, 1 suppose, they were... | |
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