The most terrible of all things is a German aesthetic litterateur.
2
A litterateur cannot understand me; only a complete man or a true artist can.
3
He was the first litterateur who ever paid attention to me as a poet.
4
But he is an editor as well as a litterateur.
5
Another view was held by Don Isaac Abarbanel, the famous Jewish statesman and litterateur.
6
Guys, the celebrated Marseilles litterateur of the eighteenth century, was born with only one ear.
7
M. Chodzko met there among others the historian and statesman Guizot, the litterateur Francois, and Madame Marliani.
8
Algarotti, Francesco, a litterateur, friend of Voltaire.
9
As woman, novelist, philosopher, litterateur, and conversationist, she has marked, if not equal, claims upon our attention.
10
Only a great litterateur could have conceived such a passage: only a great orator could have so delivered it.
11
He was a litterateur, a rhetorician, an idealist, where Spencer was a philosopher, a scientific man, and a rationalist.
12
The litterateur is warning the menials that their charge is sacred; that the sheets he has produced are impossible to replace.
13
No recluse he, no fine scholar, no polished litterateur, but a hard-headed, soft-hearted human man of the sturdy old Suffolk breed.
14
Three of them were, like Gabriel, engineers, the fourth was a painter, and the fifth was a litterateur in a small way.
15
A letter from a distinguished litterateur to Sir Morell Mackenzie gives a striking example of the idiosyncrasy to eggs transmitted through four generations.
16
W.' And from that day William was accorded much of the deference due to a litterateur which the fates had hitherto denied him.