Reflections of the Law in LiteratureUniversity of Pennsylvania Press, 1956 - 83 halaman This book is a volume in the Penn Press Anniversary Collection. To mark its 125th anniversary in 2015, the University of Pennsylvania Press rereleased more than 1,100 titles from Penn Press's distinguished backlist from 1899-1999 that had fallen out of print. Spanning an entire century, the Anniversary Collection offers peer-reviewed scholarship in a wide range of subject areas. |
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Halaman 19
... told also of the life- preserver which Phineas had shown them , as he took it from the pocket of his outside coat . Then Lord Fawn gave further evidence , which seemed to tell very hardly upon Phineas . He also had been at the club ...
... told also of the life- preserver which Phineas had shown them , as he took it from the pocket of his outside coat . Then Lord Fawn gave further evidence , which seemed to tell very hardly upon Phineas . He also had been at the club ...
Halaman 41
... told you in summary form all there is to know about Shakespeare's life , but it is obvious that I have not told you all there is to know about Shakespeare . There remain the poems , the sonnets , and the thirty- seven plays comprising ...
... told you in summary form all there is to know about Shakespeare's life , but it is obvious that I have not told you all there is to know about Shakespeare . There remain the poems , the sonnets , and the thirty- seven plays comprising ...
Halaman 66
... told , " and the last line , " Who would has heard Sordello's story told , " were the only two lines in the poem that he understood , and that both of them were lies . Finally , there is the problem of the bad lines . There is a sense ...
... told , " and the last line , " Who would has heard Sordello's story told , " were the only two lines in the poem that he understood , and that both of them were lies . Finally , there is the problem of the bad lines . There is a sense ...
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afterwards Antonio bad lines barrister Bassanio believe Ben Jonson bond Bonteen Browning called Caponsacchi and Pompilia Chaffanbrass chancellor client club course courts of equity criminal death defendant doubt drown Emilius England English Erle Ethics evidence fact Fitzgibbon friends grey coat Guido guilty Hamlet innocent John of Salisbury judge justice Justinian's Lady Eustace lawyer lived lodgings London Lord Campbell Lord Fawn Lord Fawn's solicitor Lorenzo and Jessica Madame Goesler Major Mackintosh marriage married Merchant of Venice murder natural law never Nevertheless night Old Yellow Book opinion Pandects Parliament party Perfect Partiality person philosophic skeptic Phineas Finn Pietro and Violante plays poem poet police political Pope Portia positivists pound of flesh quarrel question reason Ring Rome Scruby seems Shakespeare Shylock Sir James Hales story Stratford street suppose sure tell tion told took trial scene Trollope truth Wickerby Wickerby's wife witnesses word wrote