| William Morris - 1888 - 226 стор.
...we are on. Less than forty years ago — about thirty— I first saw the city of Rouen, then still in its outward aspect a piece of the Middle Ages :...find it was the greatest pleasure I have ever had : and now it is a pleasure which no one can ever have again : it is lost to the world for ever. At... | |
| John William Mackail - 1899 - 434 стор.
...beautifully autobiographic passages of "The Aims of Art," "I first saw the city of Rouen, then still in its outward aspect a piece of the Middle Ages :...find it was the greatest pleasure I have ever had : and now it is a pleasure which no one can ever have again : it is lost to the world for ever. At... | |
| James Benjamin Kenyon - 1901 - 268 стор.
...without consideration. While still an undergraduate at Oxford he "first saw the city of Rouen, then still in its outward aspect a piece of the Middle Ages :...mingled beauty, history, and romance took hold on me." And he further adds : "I can only say that, looking back on my past life, I find it was the greatest... | |
| James Morton - 1901 - 66 стор.
..."The Aims of Art." " Less than forty years ago," he says, " I first saw the city of Rouen, then still in its outward aspect a piece of the Middle Ages....its mingled beauty, history and romance took hold of me. I could only say that, looking back on my past life, I find it is the greatest pleasure I ever... | |
| James Benjamin Kenyon - 1901 - 266 стор.
...words can tell you how its mingled beauty, history, and romance took hold on me." And he further adds : "I can only say that, looking back on my past life,...find it was the greatest pleasure I have ever had ; and now it is a pleasure which no one can ever have again ; it is lost to the world forever;" that... | |
| William Morris - 1903 - 224 стор.
...we are on. Less than forty years ago — about thirty — I first saw the city of Rouen, then still in its outward aspect a piece of the Middle Ages :...find it was the greatest pleasure I have ever had : and now it is a pleasure which no one can ever have again : it is lost to the world for ever. At... | |
| William Morris - 1904 - 334 стор.
...there, on Rouen town." "Less than forty years ago [in 1854] 1 first saw the city of Rouen, then still in its outward aspect a piece of the Middle Ages :...find it was the greatest pleasure I have ever had : and now it is a pleasure which no one can ever have again: it is lost to the world for ever " (W.... | |
| William Angus Knight - 1911 - 296 стор.
...Glasgow ; poet. THE AIMS OF ART LESS than forty years ago I first saw the city of Rouen, then still in its outward aspect a piece of the Middle Ages :...find it was the greatest pleasure I have ever had : and now it is a pleasure which no one can ever have again : it is lost to the world for ever. At... | |
| 1899 - 1036 стор.
...consideration. "While still an undergraduate at Oxford he " first saw the city of Rouen, then still in its outward aspect a piece of the Middle Ages :...mingled beauty, history, and romance took hold on me." And he further adds : " I can only say that, looking back on my past life, I find it was the greatest... | |
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