| England - 1834 - 918 pages
...astonishment of my attendants, without uttering one word, though often sighing most profoundly. ' At length I was called to my fiery trial. I found my venerable...one is the sole object of attention to that immense •pace, lined as it were with human intellect from top to bottom, and all around, may perhaps be imagined,... | |
| Early English newspapers - 1834 - 734 pages
...astonishment of my attendants, without uttering one word, though often sighing most profoundly. At length I was called to my fiery trial. I found my venerable...imagined, but can never be described, and by me can be never forgotten. Of the general effect of this night's performance I need not speak ; it has already... | |
| English essays - 1834 - 772 pages
...astonishment of my attendants, without uttering one word, though often sighing most profoundly. At length I was called to my fiery trial. I found my venerable...imagined, but can never be described, and by me can be never forgotten. Of the general effect of this night's performance I need not speak ; it has already... | |
| Leigh Hunt - Liberalism (Religion) - 1834 - 972 pages
...of my attendants, without uttering one word, though often sighing most profoundly. • At length I was called to my fiery trial. I found my venerable...consciousness that one is the sole object of attention to that immunise space, lined as it were with human intellect from top to bottom, and all around, may perhaps... | |
| Percy Fitzgerald - Actors - 1874 - 360 pages
...wandered about the streets round the play-house. As she found herself on the stage she felt, she said, "the awful consciousness that one is the sole object...human intellect from top to bottom and all around, it may be imagined but can never be described, and by me can never be forgotten ! " She had no need... | |
| Charles Bruce - Great Britain - 1875 - 636 pages
...astonishment of my attendants, without uttering one word, though often sighing most profoundly. 'At length I was called to my fiery trial. I found my venerable...less agitated than myself. The awful consciousness of being the sole object of attention to that immense space, lined, as it were, with human intellect... | |
| American periodicals - 1877 - 826 pages
...crammed, and she was received with a hearty round of applause. "The awful consciousness," she says, " that one is the sole object of attention to that immense...human intellect from top to bottom and all around, may be imagined but can never be described, and by me can never be forgotten." All. doubts, however, were... | |
| English periodicals - 1877 - 604 pages
...to ceiling ; the excitement was immense. She herself has left us a description of her sensations : ' The awful consciousness that one is the sole object...to that immense space lined as it were with human intellects from top to bottom and all around, it may be imagined but can never be described, and by... | |
| Belgravia - 1877 - 556 pages
...floor to ceiling ; the excitement was immense. She herself has left us a description of her sensations: 'The awful consciousness that one is the sole object...to that immense space lined as it were with human intellects from top to bottom and all around, it may be imagined but can never be described, and by... | |
| 1877 - 616 pages
...to ceiling ; the excitement was immense. She herself has left us a description of her sensations : ' The awful consciousness that one is the sole object...to that immense space lined as it were with human intellects from top to bottom and all around, it may be imagined but can never be described, and by... | |
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