The New-York Review, and Atheneum Magazine, Bände 1-2E. Bliss & E. White, 1825 |
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Seite 3
... light age for which they were written . In looking over the names of those English poets who have made use of the materials furnished by the sacred writings , it will appear that , generally speaking , wherever great powers of mind have ...
... light age for which they were written . In looking over the names of those English poets who have made use of the materials furnished by the sacred writings , it will appear that , generally speaking , wherever great powers of mind have ...
Seite 17
... light and cultivation . Before the invention of the press , every question of power was brought to the standard of brute force : in the present age , every question of this sort is brought to the standard of public opinion . Throughout ...
... light and cultivation . Before the invention of the press , every question of power was brought to the standard of brute force : in the present age , every question of this sort is brought to the standard of public opinion . Throughout ...
Seite 18
... light ; the colonial possessions of Europe , which border on us , are too feeble to require any preparation against them ; and with the nations of the south , which have recently sprung into independent existence , we shall be likely ...
... light ; the colonial possessions of Europe , which border on us , are too feeble to require any preparation against them ; and with the nations of the south , which have recently sprung into independent existence , we shall be likely ...
Seite 29
... light is not so great as the light of the sun or moon , yet mariners sail by ' their conduct , and though with trepidation and some danger , yet very ' regularly they enter into the haven . This heap of probable inducements ' is not of ...
... light is not so great as the light of the sun or moon , yet mariners sail by ' their conduct , and though with trepidation and some danger , yet very ' regularly they enter into the haven . This heap of probable inducements ' is not of ...
Seite 32
... lights , in a way which he himself does not and could not describe or ex- plain -- whether in the body or out of the ... light . " His mind is evi- dently crowded with ideas struggling for utterance , with thoughts and emotions for which ...
... lights , in a way which he himself does not and could not describe or ex- plain -- whether in the body or out of the ... light . " His mind is evi- dently crowded with ideas struggling for utterance , with thoughts and emotions for which ...
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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