The Eclectic Magazine of Foreign Literature, Science, and Art, Band 2Leavitt, Trow, & Company, 1844 |
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Seite 8
... nature of the object toward which they are of the collective existence , Mankind , and re- directed , and their relation to that object . gard social life as the continued development Hence arises that kind of indifference which of an ...
... nature of the object toward which they are of the collective existence , Mankind , and re- directed , and their relation to that object . gard social life as the continued development Hence arises that kind of indifference which of an ...
Seite 12
... nature of his relations toward them ? How , above all , will you raise this fallen soul , ex- cept by saying to him , -by telling him in acts , not reasonings which he does not under- stand , - " Thou , too , art man ; the breath of God ...
... nature of his relations toward them ? How , above all , will you raise this fallen soul , ex- cept by saying to him , -by telling him in acts , not reasonings which he does not under- stand , - " Thou , too , art man ; the breath of God ...
Seite 20
... Nature had meant him for a poet . He largely excited and gratified curiosity - and the influence of what he did has had lasting effects : but no metrical translation , however faithful , however clever , unless it is vivified throughout ...
... Nature had meant him for a poet . He largely excited and gratified curiosity - and the influence of what he did has had lasting effects : but no metrical translation , however faithful , however clever , unless it is vivified throughout ...
Seite 26
... nature interrupt with equal indifference the career of the valuable and of the useless part of her off spring , that no preserving spirit watches over ' If health , like the good works of the monks , were a transferable commodity , I ...
... nature interrupt with equal indifference the career of the valuable and of the useless part of her off spring , that no preserving spirit watches over ' If health , like the good works of the monks , were a transferable commodity , I ...
Seite 28
... nature always rather to feel dislike than to from the external evidence of the extreme vene- express it ; and if another finds the same faults ration in which the book was held by all the that have displeased me in your writings , I ...
... nature always rather to feel dislike than to from the external evidence of the extreme vene- express it ; and if another finds the same faults ration in which the book was held by all the that have displeased me in your writings , I ...
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admiration Ammiel Andrew Marvell appears Assir atmospheric railway Austria Barère beautiful believe body Brittany called canal character Church command court Dalkey dear death doubt Duke duty effect Emperor engine England English eyes Ezela father favor feel fleet France French friends genius German Girondists give hand heart Hippolyte Carnot honor hope Hophin hour human Hume Hume's James Crofton king labor lady Lanfranc less letters literary living London look Lord St means ment miles mind moral mother nation nature never noble Norwich object observed Odin opinion Paris passed Penny Postage perhaps person poor Post-Office postage present Prince de Metternich principle Prussia Ptolemies railway reader remarkable replied Robespierre seems Serapeum speak spirit thing thou thought tion took truth Whig whole words write young