| Ann Ward Radcliffe - 1799 - 440 str.
...difcoloured with fpots, that it was not with* r 5 out out difficulty the letters could be traced. The fi&ions of the Provencal writers, whether drawn from the Arabian...and incident; and it is not wonderful, that Dorothee and Ludovico Ihould be fafcinated by inventions, which had captivated the carelefs imagination in every... | |
| Leigh Hunt - 1849 - 264 str.
...spots, that it was not without difficulty the letters could be traced. The fictions of the Prove^al writers, whether drawn from the Arabian legends brought by the Saracens into Spain, H2 or recounting the chivalric exploits performed by crusaders whom the troubadours accompanied to... | |
| Leigh Hunt - 1852 - 470 str.
...to be disfigured and mouldy, and the leaves to be so discoloured with spots, that it was not without difficulty the letters could be traced. The fictions...or recounting the chivalric exploits performed by crusaders whom the troubadours accompanied to the East, were generally splendid, and always marvellous... | |
| 1852 - 460 str.
...to be disfigured and mouldy, and the leaves to be so discoloured with spots, that it was not without difficulty the letters could be traced. The fictions...or recounting the chivalric exploits performed by crusaders whom the troubadours accompanied to the East, were generally splendid, and always marvellous... | |
| Leigh Hunt - 1852 - 460 str.
...to be disfigured and mouldy, and the leaves to be so discoloured with spots, that it was not without difficulty the letters could be traced. The fictions...or recounting the chivalric exploits performed by crusaders whom the troubadours accompanied to the East, were generally splendid, and always marvellous... | |
| Leigh Hunt - 1859 - 466 str.
...to be disfigured and mouldy, and the leaves to be so discoloured with spots, that it was not without difficulty the letters could be traced. The fictions...or recounting the chivalric exploits performed by crusaders whom the troubadours accompanied to the East, were generally splendid, and always marvellous... | |
| Ann Ward Radcliffe - 1859 - 654 str.
...to be disfigured and mouldy, and the leaves to be discoloured with spot*, that it was not \\itliniit difficulty the letters could be traced. The fictions...whether drawn from the Arabian legends brought by tli e Saracens into Ppaiit, or recounting the chivjilric exploits performed by the crnsnders whom the... | |
| Ann Radcliffe, Matthew Gregory Lewis, Charles Robert Maturin - 1891 - 360 str.
...spots, that it was not without difficulty the letters could be traced. The fictions of the Provengal writers, whether drawn from the Arabian legends brought...recounting the chivalric exploits performed by the crusaders whom the troubadours accompanied to the East, were generally splendid, and always marvellous... | |
| 1901 - 658 str.
...to be disfigured and mouldy, and the leaves to be so discolored with spots that it was not without difficulty the letters could be traced. The fictions...recounting the chivalric exploits performed by the crusaders whom the troubadours accompanied to the East, were generally splendid, and always marvellous,... | |
| Harry Thurston Peck, Frank R. Stockton, Julian Hawthorne - 1901 - 422 str.
...spots that it was not without difficulty the letters could be traced. The fictions of the Prove^al writers, whether drawn from the Arabian legends, brought...recounting the chivalric exploits performed by the crusaders whom the troubadours accompanied to the East, were generally splendid, and always marvellous,... | |
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