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Examples
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Thus, for instance, _Prince Hohenstiel -- Schwangau_ explains the psychological meaning of all his restless and unscrupulous activities by comparing them to the impulse which has just led him, even in the act of talking, to draw a black line on the blotting-paper exactly, so as to connect two separate blots that were already there.
Robert Browning 1905
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One understands that to the future dissector of a Hohenstiel-Schwangau and a Blougram the career might present attractions.
Robert Browning Herford, C H 1905
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He noted with satisfaction that fourteen hundred copies of Prince Hohenstiel-Schwangau were sold in five days, and says of Balaustion's Adventure “2500 in five months is a good sale for the likes of me.”
Robert Browning Dowden, Edward 1904
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That Robert Browning did not entirely share his wife's views will be clear to all readers of 'Prince Hohenstiel-Schwangau;' but there is not the smallest sign that this caused the least shadow of disagreement between them.
The Letters of Elizabeth Barrett Browning Browning, Elizabeth B 1898
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“Prince Hohenstiel-Schwangau” (the name, by the way, is not purely fanciful, being formed from Hohen Schwangau, one of the castles of the late King of Bavaria) is Browning's complement to his wife's
Life of Robert Browning Sharp, William, 1855-1905 1897
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One understands that to the future dissector of a Hohenstiel-Schwangau and a Blougram the career might present attractions.
Robert Browning 1892
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_Hohenstiel-Schwangau_ -- one of the rockiest and least attractive of all
Robert Browning 1892
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Hohenstiel-Schwangau "(the name, by the way, is not purely fanciful, being formed from Hohen Schwangau, one of the castles of the late King of Bavaria) is Browning's complement to his wife's" Ode to Napoleon
Life of Robert Browning William Sharp 1880
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"Prince Hohenstiel-Schwangau" is a defence of the doctrine of expediency: and the monologue is supposed to be carried on by the late
A Handbook to the Works of Browning (6th ed.) Sutherland Orr 1865
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Hohenstiel-Schwangau -- herself a republic -- had attacked the liberties of Rome, and destroyed them with siege and slaughter.
A Handbook to the Works of Browning (6th ed.) Sutherland Orr 1865
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