I expect to be for ever free from the temptation of making or mending poems again.* So that my friends may be perfectly secure against this impression's growing waste upon their hands, and useless, as the former has done. Let minds that are better furnished... The Evolution of a Great Hymn - Стр. 3авторы: Louis FitzGerald Benson - 1902 - Страниц: 15Полный просмотр - Подробнее о книге
| Samuel Johnson - 1810 - Страниц: 558
...making or mending poems again '•. So that my friends may he perfectly secure against this impression's growing waste upon their hands, and useless, as the former has done. Let minds that are hetter furnished for such performai iocs pursue these studies, if they are convinced... | |
| Ezekiel Sanford - 1819 - Страниц: 464
...mendTor.. XXIII. D ing poems again.* So that my friends may be perfectly secure against this impression's growing waste upon their hands, and useless, as the former has done. Let minds that are better furnished for such performances pursue these studies, if they are convinced... | |
| Isaac Watts - 1854 - Страниц: 472
...making or mending poems again.* So that my friends may be perfectly secure against this impression growing waste upon their hands, and useless, as the former has done. Let minds that are better furnished for such performances pursue these studies, if they are convinced... | |
| Isaac Watts - 1854 - Страниц: 472
...making or mending poems again.* So that my friends may be perfectly secure against this impression growing waste upon their hands, and useless, as the former has done. Let minds that are better furnished for such performances pursue these studies, if they are convinced... | |
| 1866 - Страниц: 498
...making or mending poems again.* So that my friends may be perfectly secure against this impression's growing waste upon their hands, and useless, as the former has done. Let minds that are better furnished for such performances pursue these studies, if they are convinced... | |
| Isaac Watts - 1881 - Страниц: 824
...making or mending poems again.* So that my friends may be perfectly secure against this impression's growing waste upon their hands, and useless, as the former has done. Let minds that are better furnished for such performances pursue these studies, if they are convinced... | |
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