... passage to which we have just alluded, as a specimen of this overstrained and supererogatory style. — ' The condition in which he was now placed could not fail to have a memorable effect on the mind of Julian. Shut up in a solitary dungeon, without... Cloudesley, by the author of 'Caleb Williams'. - Page 260by William Godwin - 1830Full view - About this book
| 1830 - 622 pages
...overstraiued and supererogatory style. — ' The condition in which he was now placed could not fail to Lave a memorable effect on the mind of Julian. Shut up...bitterly, most persistingly, for the death of Cloudesley (the elder). He had been instigated by his grief to seek the society of the companions he had left... | |
| Robert Walsh, Eliakim Littell, John Jay Smith - 1830 - 624 pages
...passage to which we have just alluded, as a specimen of this overstrained and supererogatory style. —" The condition in which he was now placed could not...bitterly, most persistingly, for the death of Cloudesley (the elder). He had been instigated by his grief to seek the society of the companions he had teft... | |
| William Hazlitt - English essays - 1904 - 454 pages
...passage to which we have just alluded, as a specimen of this overstrained and supererogatory style. — ' The condition in which he was now placed could not...bitterly, most persistingly, for the death of Cloudesley (the elder). He had been instigated by his grief to seek the society of the companions he had left... | |
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