Essays on Social Subjects: From the Saturday ReviewW. Blackwood and Sons, 1864 - 305 sider |
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... 30 39 48 58 69 79 89 99 ཌ ཙཱུ རྒྱ རྨི $ £ ཆེ ེ ® £ SCENES , ACQUAINTANCES AND FRIENDS , SAYING DISAGREEABLE THINGS , 110 ON BEING UNDERSTOOD , STUDY OF CHARACTER , PREJUDICES , . SHIRKING , CONSTANCY , RESERVE , 120 130 140 151 161 173.
... 30 39 48 58 69 79 89 99 ཌ ཙཱུ རྒྱ རྨི $ £ ཆེ ེ ® £ SCENES , ACQUAINTANCES AND FRIENDS , SAYING DISAGREEABLE THINGS , 110 ON BEING UNDERSTOOD , STUDY OF CHARACTER , PREJUDICES , . SHIRKING , CONSTANCY , RESERVE , 120 130 140 151 161 173.
Side 17
... acquaintances , their associates . Every day something has passed their lips which has acted like a blow at the time , and worked on the recollection like a blister , which has been repeated with querulous soreness and been passed on to ...
... acquaintances , their associates . Every day something has passed their lips which has acted like a blow at the time , and worked on the recollection like a blister , which has been repeated with querulous soreness and been passed on to ...
Side 98
... we have an imperfect , and very often false , idea of every man whom we only know at ease and entrenched behind all the restraints of society . ACQUAINTANCES AND FRIENDS . THERE is a very common confusion 98 SCENES .
... we have an imperfect , and very often false , idea of every man whom we only know at ease and entrenched behind all the restraints of society . ACQUAINTANCES AND FRIENDS . THERE is a very common confusion 98 SCENES .
Side 99
... acquaintances do not turn into friends by a sort of natural growth or transformation ; while others affect to despise acquaintances , because they are not friends , and therefore not worth having . In talk and in theory , " mere ...
... acquaintances do not turn into friends by a sort of natural growth or transformation ; while others affect to despise acquaintances , because they are not friends , and therefore not worth having . In talk and in theory , " mere ...
Side 100
... acquaintances , could ill spare them , and is really greatly indebted to them , even though there may be no chance of the relation ever changing into that of intimate friendship . Persons are not worse than we are because entire ...
... acquaintances , could ill spare them , and is really greatly indebted to them , even though there may be no chance of the relation ever changing into that of intimate friendship . Persons are not worse than we are because entire ...
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acquaintances action Adam Bede ALEXANDER KEITH JOHNSTON amused attention Author character Charles Lamb choice cloth conscious constancy contempt course Crown 8vo DAVID PAGE disagreeable things doubt Dr Johnson dull dulness Engravings experience expression eyes fact false shame Fcap feeling folly fool foolish friends friendship GEORGE ELIOT give habit heart History hugger-mugger human idea ignorance indulge influence instinct intercourse interest JOHN GALT JOHN HILL BURTON JOHN TULLOCH judgment labour live look means memory ment mind mistakes moral motives nature never notion ourselves pain perhaps persons pleasure prejudices Professor qualities realise reason recognise reserve SAMUEL WARREN scenes Scotland SCOTT BURN Second Edition sense shirk SIR ARCHIBALD ALISON snub social society sort spirit stand sure sympathy talk taste tell temper THOMAS AIRD thought tion truth vanity vols weak wise words
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