A Tragedy in Stone: And Other PapersJohn Lane, 1913 - 343 ページ |
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... look upon the more mechanical part of your work with all the more satisfaction , in that you will see that its pursuit does not necessarily divorce you from striving for those giddy heights of human endeavour which are the throne of ...
... look upon the more mechanical part of your work with all the more satisfaction , in that you will see that its pursuit does not necessarily divorce you from striving for those giddy heights of human endeavour which are the throne of ...
73 ページ
... look like sugar canes and castor - oil plants . In portraiture we are shown mere faces , flat and without any sense of the subtle mysteries of aerial perspective— faces all blotches and scars that might well serve as charts to ...
... look like sugar canes and castor - oil plants . In portraiture we are shown mere faces , flat and without any sense of the subtle mysteries of aerial perspective— faces all blotches and scars that might well serve as charts to ...
86 ページ
... look its very best , but also to enhance the beauty of its neighbours - present a series of pictures difficult to realise . Fancy a great glen all besnowed with the tender bloom of Cherries and Peaches and Magnolias in spring , or ...
... look its very best , but also to enhance the beauty of its neighbours - present a series of pictures difficult to realise . Fancy a great glen all besnowed with the tender bloom of Cherries and Peaches and Magnolias in spring , or ...
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... look like a procession of Lilliputian tombstones - a very necro- polis of plants . Here are love , money , and labour lavishly expended , and all lost for want of a little attention to that teaching which Nature so unmis- takably gives ...
... look like a procession of Lilliputian tombstones - a very necro- polis of plants . Here are love , money , and labour lavishly expended , and all lost for want of a little attention to that teaching which Nature so unmis- takably gives ...
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... look upon as the legitimate ornament and pride of their landscape are themselves aliens , the one an Italian , the ... looks as if they were designed not to assist the natives , but to conquer them . " In rightly using , then , the great ...
... look upon as the legitimate ornament and pride of their landscape are themselves aliens , the one an Italian , the ... looks as if they were designed not to assist the natives , but to conquer them . " In rightly using , then , the great ...
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多く使われている語句
Adams Anne Boleyn armoury artist bamboo beautiful Benzaiten brother Buddha Buddhist called Captain carried castle century charm chief China Chinese colours Court cryptomeria Daimyos death earth East Emperor English eyes famous father favour feudal system foreign garden genius Hakoné hand head Henry Henry VIII Hirado Hôjô honour horse Imagination invention Iyémitsu Iyéyasu Japanese Kamakura King Kugyô Kyōto ladies land Leonardo Leonardo da Vinci lived look Lord matter Mikado Moriyoshi Mount Fuji mountains never noble Odawara Old Japan painted palace paper perhaps plants poetry priest Prince provinces Queen remained river Rōnin sacred Samarkand Samurai Sanétomo Saris Satsuma seems sent ship Shiraki Shogun shrine spirit stone story Sukétsuné sword Taiko temple things to-day took Tower of London trees walls wonder words Yedo Yoritomo
人気のある引用
7 ページ - the city of London hath in the east a very great and most strong Palatine Tower, whose turrets and walls do rise from a deep foundation, the mortar thereof being tempered with the blood of beasts.
211 ページ - Adams was : he having been in such favour with two emperors of Japan as never was any Christian in these parts of the world, and might freely have entered and had speech with the emperors when many Japan kings stood without and could not be permitted.
168 ページ - Rather than allow this, as we are not the equals of foreigners in the mechanical arts, let us have intercourse with foreign countries, learn their drill and tactics, and when we have made the nation as united as one family, we shall be able to go abroad and give lands in foreign countries to those who have distinguished themselves in battle...
231 ページ - ... brave, courteous, light-hearted, pleasure-loving people, sentimental rather than passionate, witty and humorous, of nimble apprehension, but not profound ; ingenious and inventive, but hardly capable of high intellectual achievement; of receptive minds endowed with a voracious appetite for knowledge ; with a turn for neatness and elegance of expression, but seldom or never rising to sublimity.
201 ページ - Now being in such grace and favour, by reason I learned him some points of geometry and understanding of the art of mathematics with other things, I pleased him so that what I said he would not contrary.
99 ページ - A grotto is not often the wish or pleasure of an Englishman, who has more frequent need to solicit than exclude the sun ; but Pope's excavation was requisite as an entrance to his garden, and, as some men try to be proud of their defects, he extracted an ornament from an inconvenience, and vanity produced a grotto where necessity enforced a passage.
7 ページ - Conqueror, builded the Tower of London, to wit, the great white and square tower there, about the year of Christ 1078, appointing Gundulph, then Bishop of Rochester, to be principal surveyor and overseer of that work, who was for that time lodged in the house of Edmere, a burgess of London.
98 ページ - Here he planted the vines and the quincunx which his verses mention; and being under the necessity of making a subterraneous passage to a garden on the other side of the road, he adorned it with fossile bodies, and dignified it with the title of a grotto; a place of silence and retreat, from which he endeavoured to persuade his friends and himself that cares and passions could be excluded.
108 ページ - The stalks are cut near the ground, and then sorted into parcels according to the age, and tied up in small bundles. The younger the bamboo, the better is the quality of the paper which is made from it. The bundles are thrown into a reservoir of mud and water, and buried in the ooze for about a fortnight to soften them. They are then taken out, cut into pieces of a proper length, and put into mortars with a little water, to...
20 ページ - Paul's, with genius and virtue, with public veneration and with imperishable renown ; not, as in our humblest churches and churchyards, with everything that is most endearing in social and domestic charities; but with whatever is darkest in human nature and human destiny, with the savage triumph of implacable enemies, with the inconstancy, the ingratitude, the cowardice of friends, with all the miseries of fallen greatness and of blighted fame.