Century Monthly Magazine, Volume 92Josiah Gilbert Holland, Richard Watson Gilder Century Company, 1916 - American literature |
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Page 14
... walk around a new London . I wandered rest- lessly out of the park I had sat in . Vainly I tried to imagine myself an ardent tourist from the eighteenth century . Intolerable was the strain of the slow - passing and empty minutes . Long ...
... walk around a new London . I wandered rest- lessly out of the park I had sat in . Vainly I tried to imagine myself an ardent tourist from the eighteenth century . Intolerable was the strain of the slow - passing and empty minutes . Long ...
Page 19
... walk- ing one afternoon along the rue d'Antin , and I saw him advancing from the oppo- site direction , overdressed as ever , and swinging an ebony cane and altogether be- having as though the whole pavement be- longed to him . At ...
... walk- ing one afternoon along the rue d'Antin , and I saw him advancing from the oppo- site direction , overdressed as ever , and swinging an ebony cane and altogether be- having as though the whole pavement be- longed to him . At ...
Page 39
... walk . He stepped out of his room into the street , and stood blinking a moment in the mid- day sunshine . Then he walked down the village street to the poste , and pushed through the dressing - rooms to the dining- room at the rear ...
... walk . He stepped out of his room into the street , and stood blinking a moment in the mid- day sunshine . Then he walked down the village street to the poste , and pushed through the dressing - rooms to the dining- room at the rear ...
Page 44
... walk quite unmolested in Lon- don . In Paris he will be at once re- marked , and will be fortunate if he avoids an open quarrel . The instinct for think- ing and working together in France is as great as the instinct in England for each ...
... walk quite unmolested in Lon- don . In Paris he will be at once re- marked , and will be fortunate if he avoids an open quarrel . The instinct for think- ing and working together in France is as great as the instinct in England for each ...
Page 46
... walk from room to room of this vast building , and to discover , in snatches of conversation with men in all stages of sickness and mutilation , how per- fectly the rudeness of their shelter sym- bolizes their fortitude and simplicity ...
... walk from room to room of this vast building , and to discover , in snatches of conversation with men in all stages of sickness and mutilation , how per- fectly the rudeness of their shelter sym- bolizes their fortitude and simplicity ...
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