The British Quarterly Review, Band 38Henry Allon Hodder and Stoughton, 1863 |
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Seite 5
... mean ? De Quincey got through the first year , notwithstanding his unhappiness , acquitted him- self with the highest credit at the public examinations of the school , acknowledged that he had not a single thing to complain of , and ...
... mean ? De Quincey got through the first year , notwithstanding his unhappiness , acquitted him- self with the highest credit at the public examinations of the school , acknowledged that he had not a single thing to complain of , and ...
Seite 7
... means and social ambition that was little likely to be gratified , what of the mill - horse round of common - place ... mean powers of analysis , and a faculty for discrimination , and for logical and metaphysical science generally ...
... means and social ambition that was little likely to be gratified , what of the mill - horse round of common - place ... mean powers of analysis , and a faculty for discrimination , and for logical and metaphysical science generally ...
Seite 9
... presumption . If we who write , and others who read , are not destroying body and soul together by opium - eating , it by no means follows that we are better than those who are , or than he who did . We write , therefore , only.
... presumption . If we who write , and others who read , are not destroying body and soul together by opium - eating , it by no means follows that we are better than those who are , or than he who did . We write , therefore , only.
Seite 21
... means suppose you are immediately to see it . You will be disappointed if you do . We must first ' pile the agony ... mean nothing less than the vision fulfilled . Not yet , impetuous reader , not yet . You are allowed to continue ...
... means suppose you are immediately to see it . You will be disappointed if you do . We must first ' pile the agony ... mean nothing less than the vision fulfilled . Not yet , impetuous reader , not yet . You are allowed to continue ...
Seite 28
... means of various and striking thoughts , some aspect of truth which of itself is supported by no spontaneous ... mean- ing . The thing is this : if Mr. De Quincey regarded rhetoric as the dishonest contrivance he describes , it was not ...
... means of various and striking thoughts , some aspect of truth which of itself is supported by no spontaneous ... mean- ing . The thing is this : if Mr. De Quincey regarded rhetoric as the dishonest contrivance he describes , it was not ...
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