The Foreign Quarterly Review, Nide 31Treuttel and Würtz, Treuttel, Jun, and Richter, 1843 |
Kirjan sisältä
Tulokset 1 - 5 kokonaismäärästä 99
Sivu 1
... readers may not all of them be sufficiently en- lightened to know much about Karl Immermann : this great genius , who in 1832 wrote a mythical drama , comprising omnes res , et quædam alia : a perfect system of theology , a perfect VOL ...
... readers may not all of them be sufficiently en- lightened to know much about Karl Immermann : this great genius , who in 1832 wrote a mythical drama , comprising omnes res , et quædam alia : a perfect system of theology , a perfect VOL ...
Sivu 3
... reader to possess respecting the early heresies in the first and second centu- ries . M. Kinkel is kind enough to point out that gnosticism lies at its foundation , and then proceeds to show what gnosticism is , with all the air of one ...
... reader to possess respecting the early heresies in the first and second centu- ries . M. Kinkel is kind enough to point out that gnosticism lies at its foundation , and then proceeds to show what gnosticism is , with all the air of one ...
Sivu 5
... reader ; and there is a species of drollery through which he will slowly and sorrowfully work his way , wondering when it will close . It is a strange jumble this Münchhausen ' of Immermann ! 6 But there is one great defect in the book ...
... reader ; and there is a species of drollery through which he will slowly and sorrowfully work his way , wondering when it will close . It is a strange jumble this Münchhausen ' of Immermann ! 6 But there is one great defect in the book ...
Sivu 8
... the middle of a word . The reader , if he wish to regale himself with this language , is referred to Heyse's Lehrbuch der Deutschen Sprache . The Baron Münchhausen appears . 9 of the ' deadening 8 Immermann's New Münchhausen .
... the middle of a word . The reader , if he wish to regale himself with this language , is referred to Heyse's Lehrbuch der Deutschen Sprache . The Baron Münchhausen appears . 9 of the ' deadening 8 Immermann's New Münchhausen .
Sivu 19
... reader , is deeply affecting . He is the head of the tribunal of peasants , which is the relic of the ancient Vehmgericht , and he uses his authority in that secret court to exclude , from all asso- ciation with his fellows , a peasant ...
... reader , is deeply affecting . He is the head of the tribunal of peasants , which is the relic of the ancient Vehmgericht , and he uses his authority in that secret court to exclude , from all asso- ciation with his fellows , a peasant ...
Muita painoksia - Näytä kaikki
Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
admiration amusing ancient appear Austria Avignon beautiful Berlin Boccaccio Bohemia Breton Burgraves Calderon called character comedy court death drama Duke Emperor England English Europe eyes father favour feeling France Francia French friends Frisian Gargantua German give goualeuse hand heart Herschel Hofschulze honour interest king Kohl's labours lady language learned leno letter literary living look Lope Lope de Vega Lord Louis XIV Madame Marquis de Custine Masham master ment mind Molière moral Münchhausen Napoleon nature never object once Pantagruel Paraguay Paris passion perhaps person Petrarca philosophy Plato Plautus play poet poetry political present prince Prussia Pyrgo Rabelais racter reader remarkable Roman scene seems servant slave Socrates soul Spanish spirit stars thing thou thought tion truth whole wife words write young
Suositut otteet
Sivu 479 - Athenians, that you have incurred the imputation from those who wish to speak evil of the city, of having put to death Socrates, a wise man (for those who are inclined to reproach you will say that I am wise, even if I am not). Had you waited a short time the thing would have happened without your agency ; for you see my years ; I am far advanced in life, and near to death. I address this not to all of you, but to those who have voted for the capital sentence, and this...
Sivu 587 - ... imagine that the man Rodriguez Francia passed, in a remote, but highly remarkable, not unquestionable or unquestioned manner, across the confused theatre of this world. For some thirty years, he was all the government his native Paraguay could be said to have. For some six-and-twenty years he was express Sovereign of it; for some three, or some two years, a Sovereign with bared sword, stern as Rhadamanthus: through all his years, and through all his days, since the beginning of him, a Man or...
Sivu 577 - And when the children of Israel cried unto the LORD, the LORD raised up a deliverer to the children of Israel, who delivered them, even Othniel the son of Kenaz, Caleb's younger brother.
Sivu 334 - Athenaeus, in waiting on the hour wherein God my Creator shall call me, and command me to depart from this earth and transitory pilgrimage. Wherefore, my son, I admonish thee to employ thy youth to profit as well as thou canst, both in thy studies and in virtue. Thou art at Paris, where the...
Sivu 570 - ... volumes. There were many ponderous books on law ; a few on the inductive sciences ; some in French and some in Latin upon subjects of general literature, with Euclid's Elements, and some school-boy treatises on algebra. On a large table were heaps of law-papers and processes.
Sivu 569 - He had a mate-cup in one hand, a cigar in the other; and a little urchin of a negro, with his arms crossed, was in attendance by the gentleman's side. The stranger's countenance was dark, and his black eyes -were very penetrating, while his jet hair, combed back from a bold forehead, and hanging in natural ringlets over his shoulders, gave him a dignified and striking air.
Sivu 334 - And at some of the hours of the day apply thy mind to the study of the Holy Scriptures; first, in Greek, the New Testament, with the Epistles of the Apostles; and then the Old Testament in Hebrew. In brief, let me see thee an...
Sivu 546 - What an entity, one of those night-leaguers of San Martin; all steadily snoring there, in the heart of the Andes, under the eternal stars! Wayworn sentries with difficulty keep themselves awake; tired mules chew barley rations, or doze on three legs; the feeble watchfire will hardly kindle a cigar; Canopus and the Southern Cross glitter down; and all snores steadily, begirt by granite deserts, looked on by the constellations in that manner...
Sivu 407 - Petrarca w«is little disposed to return with the unsuccessful delegates. He continued at Avignon, where his countryman Sennuccio del Bene, who visited the same society as Laura, and who knew her personally, gave him frequent information of her, though little hope. Youth has swifter wings than Love. He had loved her sixteen years ; but all the beauty that had left her features had settled on his heart, immovable, unchangeable, eternal.
Sivu 565 - Francia wrapped himself one night in his cloak, and walked to the house of his inveterate enemy, Machain. The slave who opened the door, knowing that his master and the Doctor, like the houses of Montagu and Capulet, were smoke in each other's eyes, refused the lawyer admittance, and ran to inform his master of the strange and unexpected visit. Machain, no less struck by the circumstance than his slave, for some time hesitated; but at length determined to admit Francia. In walked the silent Doctor...