| Reginald Brimley Johnson - 1898 - 300 páginas
...and confident enough of success to supply whatever had been hitherto suppressed, I never indeed found a hint of any such defalcation, but I regretted it...short. I wish you would add an index rerum, that when the reader recollects any incident, he may easily find it, which at present he cannot do, unless he... | |
| Austin Dobson - 1902 - 232 páginas
...and confident enough of success to supply whatever had been hitherto suppressed. I never indeed found a hint of any such defalcation, but I regretted it...though the story is long, every letter is short." catastrophe does not take place until volume the fifth, so that they had to wait from April to December... | |
| Austin Dobson - 1902 - 232 páginas
...confident enough of success to supply whatever had been hitherto suppressed. I never indeed found a hiut of any such defalcation, but I regretted it ; for though the story is long, every letter is short." catastrophe does not take place until volume the fifth, so that they had to wait from April to December... | |
| Thomas Lucian Cline - 1923 - 300 páginas
...and confident enough of success to supply whatever had hitherto been suppressed. I never indeed found a hint of any such defalcation, but* I regretted it;...short . I wish you would add an index rerum, that when the reader recollects any indident, he may easily find it, which at present he cannot do, unless he... | |
| English Association - 1926 - 138 páginas
...text. Writing to Richardson about Clarissa,2 Johnson complains of suppressions : I never indeed found a hint of any such defalcation, but I regretted it...for though the story is long, every letter is short. Read . . . but I fretted. 1 I am warned by an expert that this is fallacious. The compositor commits... | |
| Janine Barchas - 2003 - 320 páginas
...whatever had been hitherto suppressed. I never indeed found a hint of any such defalcation but I fretted, for though the Story is long, every letter is short. I wish You would add an Index Rerum that when the reader recollects any incident he may easily find it, which at present he cannot do unless he knows... | |
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