The British Quarterly Review, Band 38Henry Allon Hodder and Stoughton, 1863 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 59
Seite 16
... according to our thinking , simply a fine , brilliant , and unusual talent , and of genius none at all . We have no wish to present real paradoxes , but apparent ones are sometimes really serviceable ; and as we have no space to enter ...
... according to our thinking , simply a fine , brilliant , and unusual talent , and of genius none at all . We have no wish to present real paradoxes , but apparent ones are sometimes really serviceable ; and as we have no space to enter ...
Seite 17
... according to the two several conceptions of what is meant by original thinking . He was as original a thinker as most men are who take comparatively little for granted , and who inquire before they conclude ; but he was not original in ...
... according to the two several conceptions of what is meant by original thinking . He was as original a thinker as most men are who take comparatively little for granted , and who inquire before they conclude ; but he was not original in ...
Seite 24
... according to the published state- ment of his ' Confessions , ' ' triumphed ' over his own fatal habit . And to some extent his boast was true ; for at the period of his greatest indulgence he was an eater or drinker of eight thousand ...
... according to the published state- ment of his ' Confessions , ' ' triumphed ' over his own fatal habit . And to some extent his boast was true ; for at the period of his greatest indulgence he was an eater or drinker of eight thousand ...
Seite 28
... according to himself , rhetoric always consists . Those who have read the " Confessions " will have closed them with ' the impression that I had wholly renounced the use of opium . This impression I meant to convey , and that for two ...
... according to himself , rhetoric always consists . Those who have read the " Confessions " will have closed them with ' the impression that I had wholly renounced the use of opium . This impression I meant to convey , and that for two ...
Seite 40
... according to whom " the virtue , spirit , and essence of a House of Commons consist in its being the express image of the feelings of a nation . " The consequences of this remarkable change have been to strengthen the House of Commons ...
... according to whom " the virtue , spirit , and essence of a House of Commons consist in its being the express image of the feelings of a nation . " The consequences of this remarkable change have been to strengthen the House of Commons ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
ancient appears argument beauty believe Bishop Butler century character Christian Church Codex Codex Sinaiticus criticism difficulties Divine doctrine doubt edition Elohist Empire England English Essays fact faith feel Forest France Francis Bacon George Eliot George III give Gospels Government Grammar Schools Greek hand heart human India interest Jesus Journal labour Latin less letter London Lord Marc Girardin matter mind Minister moral nation native nature never Nonconformist object opinion Origin of Species original Oudh Pará Pentateuch Plato Poland political position possessed present principle produced question Quincey reader reason regard religious remarkable Renan Roman Romola Sainte Beuve seems Simonides Sinaitic society speak species spirit supposed teaching Théophile Gautier theory things Thomas De Quincey thought tion Tischendorf truth Vatican volume Whewell whole words writers