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" Oh! to be caught out of this prison of thorns and brambles. I cannot tear my own way out. I am a coward. A beckoning of a finger" would change me, I believe. I could fly bleeding and through hootings to a comrade . . . Constantia met a soldier. Perhaps... "
Papers on Psycho-analysis - Page 54
by Ernest Jones - 1918 - 715 pages
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The Egoist: A Comedy in Narrative, Volume 1

George Meredith - Catalogs, Publishers - 1879 - 354 pages
...country, and a woman may be proud of the worst of men who do that. C.onstantia met a soldier. Perhaps she prayed and her prayer was answered. She did ill. But,...how I love her for it ! His name was Harry Oxford. Papa would call him her Perseus. She must have felt that there was no explaining what she suffered....
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The Works of George Meredith, Volume 13

George Meredith - English literature - 1897 - 322 pages
...worst of men who do that. Constantia met a soldier. Perhaps she prayed and her prayer was altered. She did ill. But, oh, how I love her for it ! His name was Harry Oxford. Papa would call him her Perseus. She must have felt that there was no explaining what she suffered....
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The Egoist: A Comedy in Narrative

George Meredith - Courtship - 1897 - 538 pages
...worst of men who do that. Constantia met a soldier. Perhaps she prayed and her prayer was altered. She did ill. But, oh, how I love her for it! His name was Harry Oxford. Papa would call him her Perseus. She must have felt that there was no explaining what she suffered....
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The Egoist: A Comedy in Narrative

George Meredith - 1898 - 548 pages
...worst of men who do that. Constantia met a soldier. Perhaps she prayed and her prayer was altered. She did ill. But, oh, how I love her for it! His name was Harry Oxford. Papa would call him her Perseus. She must have felt that there was no explaining what she suffered....
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The Works of George Meredith, Volume 13

George Meredith - English literature - 1910 - 336 pages
...worst of men who do that. Constantia met a soldier. Perhaps she prayed and her prayer was altered. She did ill. But, oh, how I love her for it ! His name was Harry Oxford. Papa would call him her Perseus. She must have felt that there was no explaining what she suffered....
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The Works of George Meredith, Volume 13

George Meredith - English literature - 1910 - 324 pages
...must have been relief, a reprieve. She did not waver, she cut the links, she signed herself over. 0 brave girl ! what do you think of me? But I have no Harry JVhit-' ford, I am alone. Let anything be said against women ; We must be very bad to have such bad...
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The American Journal of Psychology, Volume 22

Granville Stanley Hall, Edward Bradford Titchener, Karl M. Dallenbach, Madison Bentley, Edwin Garrigues Boring, Margaret Floy Washburn - Psychology - 1911 - 636 pages
...I could fly bleeding and through hootings to a comrade. . . . Constantia met a soldier. Perhaps she prayed and her prayer was answered. She did ill. But,...waver, she cut the links, she signed herself over. O brave girl, what do you think of me? But I have no Harry Whitford, I am alone" .... "the sudden consciousness...
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The American Journal of Psychology, Volume 22

Granville Stanley Hall, Edward Bradford Titchener, Karl M. Dallenbach, Madison Bentley, Edwin Garrigues Boring, Margaret Floy Washburn - Psychology - 1911 - 638 pages
...I could fly bleeding and through hootings to a comrade. . . . Constantia met a soldier. Perhaps she prayed and her prayer was answered. She did ill. But,...waver, she cut the links, she signed herself over. O brave girl, what do you think of me? But I have no Harry Whitford, I am alone" .... "the sudden consciousness...
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Psychopathology of everyday life

Sigmund Freud - 1914 - 362 pages
...a comrade. . . . Constantia met a soldier. Perhaps she prayed and her prayer was Mistakes in Speech answered. She did ill. But, oh, how I love her for...Oxford struck her a buffet, drowning her in crimson. " The fact that both men's names end in ' ford ' evidently renders the confounding of them more easy,...
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Psychopathology of Everyday Life

Sigmund Freud, Abraham Arden Brill - Association of ideas - 1915 - 368 pages
...I could fly bleeding and through hootings to a comrade. . . . Constantia met a soldier. Perhaps she prayed and her prayer was answered. She did ill. But,...Oxford struck her a buffet, drowning her in crimson. " The fact that both men's names end in ' ford ' evidently renders the confounding of them more easy,...
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