Essays Political, Historical, and Miscellaneous, Nide 3William Blackwood, 1850 |
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Tulokset 1 - 5 kokonaismäärästä 100
Sivu 3
... thought , and an extent of illustration , to which there is nothing comparable in any other writer , ancient or modern , with whom we are acquainted . All that he has seen , or read , or heard , seems present to his mind , whatever he ...
... thought , and an extent of illustration , to which there is nothing comparable in any other writer , ancient or modern , with whom we are acquainted . All that he has seen , or read , or heard , seems present to his mind , whatever he ...
Sivu 21
... thought , at the same instant , the most beautiful objects in nature ; suppose that you see at once all the hours of the day , and all the seasons of the year ; a morning of spring and a morning of autumn ; a night bespangled with stars ...
... thought , at the same instant , the most beautiful objects in nature ; suppose that you see at once all the hours of the day , and all the seasons of the year ; a morning of spring and a morning of autumn ; a night bespangled with stars ...
Sivu 24
... thought otherwise when he wrote the sublime lines on visiting the Grande Chartreuse ; Buchanan thought otherwise , when , in his exquisite Ode to May , he supposed the first zephyrs of spring to blow over the Islands of the Just . The ...
... thought otherwise when he wrote the sublime lines on visiting the Grande Chartreuse ; Buchanan thought otherwise , when , in his exquisite Ode to May , he supposed the first zephyrs of spring to blow over the Islands of the Just . The ...
Sivu 25
... thought upon the subject , classes the obvious disproportion between the desires and capacity of the soul , and the limits of its acquisitions and enjoyments in this world . In the following passage , this argument is placed in its just ...
... thought upon the subject , classes the obvious disproportion between the desires and capacity of the soul , and the limits of its acquisitions and enjoyments in this world . In the following passage , this argument is placed in its just ...
Sivu 27
... thought , and where I may find man as I am , the blood , the tears , and the labours of man . " - Vol . i . 86 , 87 . From Laconia our author directed his steps by the isthmus of Corinth to Athens . Of his first feelings CHATEAUBRIAND . 27.
... thought , and where I may find man as I am , the blood , the tears , and the labours of man . " - Vol . i . 86 , 87 . From Laconia our author directed his steps by the isthmus of Corinth to Athens . Of his first feelings CHATEAUBRIAND . 27.
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a-year admirable agriculture amidst ancient appear arms army beauty BLACKWOOD'S MAGAZINE Britain British brought burden Cæsar cause century character charm Chateaubriand Christian civilisation classes corruption decline drama effect elevated England English equally Europe evils exhibit existence feelings foreign France free trade French Gaul genius Gibbon grain greatest Greece heart Helen Faucit highest historian human ideas Iliad imagination important impression indirect taxes industry interest Italy Jerusalem Delivered labour land less Long Parliament Madame de Stael mankind manners ment mind modern nature never noble object observation opinion painting passions period philosophic poetry Poland political present principles produced prosperity provinces race recollections rendered Revolution Roman empire Rome ruin Rurick Russia scenes Sismondi society Sophocles spirit success suffering Tacitus taxes thought thousand tion truth vast wealth Whigs whole writers