Southern Quarterly Review, Volume 2Daniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell Wiley & Putnam, 1967 |
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Page 385
... character , is passive , - that of endurance ; and , but for the author's description , it would be difficult , from the action of the drama , to perceive that any passion worked upon her statuelike repose . James evidently wished to ...
... character , is passive , - that of endurance ; and , but for the author's description , it would be difficult , from the action of the drama , to perceive that any passion worked upon her statuelike repose . James evidently wished to ...
Page 387
... characters , Mr. James has great dexterity in the arrangement of his incidents . Perpetual variety and perpetual ... character as a writer . So much for a glimpse at his plot . Now for the style . Never rising to eloquence , rarely ...
... characters , Mr. James has great dexterity in the arrangement of his incidents . Perpetual variety and perpetual ... character as a writer . So much for a glimpse at his plot . Now for the style . Never rising to eloquence , rarely ...
Page 504
... character , is the political , and religion is merely its handmaiden . This is necessary to be constantly remembered in all study of Roman history , for it explains many of the apparent anomalies discernible in the career of that ...
... character , is the political , and religion is merely its handmaiden . This is necessary to be constantly remembered in all study of Roman history , for it explains many of the apparent anomalies discernible in the career of that ...
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