... liberties have been taken in altering or enlarging their accounts, the reader who looks only for amusement will probably forgive it: the learned and critical (if this work should be honoured by such readers) will deem it a matter of too little consequence... The Tales of Terror - Página 25de Christabel Forsyth Fiske - 1900 - 40 páginasVisualização completa - Sobre este livro
| Joseph Bunn Heidler - 1928 - 196 páginas
...readers) will deem it a matter of too little consequence to call for the severity of their censure. — It is generally expected that pieces of this kind should convey some one useful moral: which moral, not always perhaps, the most valuable or refined, is sometimes made... | |
| George Tobias Flom - 1928 - 532 páginas
...readers) will deem it a matter of too little consequence to call for the severity of their censure. — It is generally expected that pieces of this kind should convey some one useful moral: which moral, not always perhaps, the most valuable or refined, is sometimes made... | |
| Joseph F. Bartolomeo - 1994 - 228 páginas
...the "Advertisement" to Thomas Leland's seminal historical novel, Longsword, Earl of Salisbury (1762): It is generally expected that pieces of this kind should convey some one useful moral: which moral ... is sometimes made to float on the surface of the narrative; or is... | |
| Martin Myrone - 2005 - 408 páginas
...(1722-85) had pursued this possibility in the introduction to his historical romance Longsword (1762): 2-35 It is generally expected that pieces of this kind should convey some one useful moral: which moral, not always perhaps, the most valuable or refined, is sometimes made... | |
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