The New-York Review, and Atheneum Magazine, Bände 1-2E. Bliss & E. White, 1825 |
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Seite 1
... considered as actual human beings , subject to the common pas- sions and infirmities of our race , and , for the most part , to the ordinary influences of good and ill fortune . It cannot surely be VOL . I. 1 . impious to suppose that ...
... considered as actual human beings , subject to the common pas- sions and infirmities of our race , and , for the most part , to the ordinary influences of good and ill fortune . It cannot surely be VOL . I. 1 . impious to suppose that ...
Seite 25
... considered adverse to warlike pursuits , those nations which have been devoted to the business of traffic and exchange , hav- ing exhibited the least inclination to encounter the collisions of war . Carthage , notwithstanding the ...
... considered adverse to warlike pursuits , those nations which have been devoted to the business of traffic and exchange , hav- ing exhibited the least inclination to encounter the collisions of war . Carthage , notwithstanding the ...
Seite 31
... considered as something nobler and more divine than reason itself . They may lie dormant , in the darkness of ignorance , or the corruption of gross vice ; but , when the occasion which is to call them into energy arrives , they develop ...
... considered as something nobler and more divine than reason itself . They may lie dormant , in the darkness of ignorance , or the corruption of gross vice ; but , when the occasion which is to call them into energy arrives , they develop ...
Seite 40
... considered , perhaps no book has appeared among us , and been universally read , which has given rise to a division of sentiments respecting its merits , so marked , and so easily assignable to different classes of minds . Those who ...
... considered , perhaps no book has appeared among us , and been universally read , which has given rise to a division of sentiments respecting its merits , so marked , and so easily assignable to different classes of minds . Those who ...
Seite 49
... considered unfit themes for the imaginative writer , have not induced him to shrink from the battle grounds on which our freedom was born , or to pass them by as unsusceptible of the decorations , or unworthy of the gifts of genius . In ...
... considered unfit themes for the imaginative writer , have not induced him to shrink from the battle grounds on which our freedom was born , or to pass them by as unsusceptible of the decorations , or unworthy of the gifts of genius . In ...
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American appear Bank of England beautiful Boston Brahmins Buckel called Caspar character civil civil law Columbia College common law contract court death doctrine earth effect England English Euripides eyes favour feeling genius gentleman give habits Hadad hand heart Hermsprong honour human Indian interest John Paul Jones judge justice kind knowledge labour lady land language latitude learned less literary look M'Intosh manner ment merits Michael Forester mind moral nature never New-York Nostradamus o'er object observations opinion original party person philosophers picture pleasure poet possession practice present principles racter readers remarks respect Richard Henry Lee Robert Bage seems society speculation spirit talent taste thee thing thou thought tion treaty truth Verplanck volume whole writer written young