The New-England Magazine, Band 9Joseph Tinker Buckingham, Edwin Buckingham, Samuel Gridley Howe, John Osborne Sargent, Park Benjamin J. T. and E. Buckingham, 1965 |
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Seite 205
... thought , touching at once the two natures of man ; a terrible les- son , conveyed in sublime verse ; one of the most momentous truths of religion and philosophy , developed in one of the most beautiful fictions of poetry ; the entire ...
... thought , touching at once the two natures of man ; a terrible les- son , conveyed in sublime verse ; one of the most momentous truths of religion and philosophy , developed in one of the most beautiful fictions of poetry ; the entire ...
Seite 249
... thought finds anything to detain it . Your subject seems diffused through the overcharged air , and you gaze and gaze , with intent abstraction , till your flow of thought becomes as permanently so- ber and steady as the day itself . A ...
... thought finds anything to detain it . Your subject seems diffused through the overcharged air , and you gaze and gaze , with intent abstraction , till your flow of thought becomes as permanently so- ber and steady as the day itself . A ...
Seite 454
... thought of those who are about him ; perhaps some would say that nothing of the intellectual is in his countenance . I think Byron has well represented his mind as wandering to his home , his young barbarians and their Dacian mother ...
... thought of those who are about him ; perhaps some would say that nothing of the intellectual is in his countenance . I think Byron has well represented his mind as wandering to his home , his young barbarians and their Dacian mother ...
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Nahant | 46 |
Murat Lines suggested by a Picture | 65 |
United States Senate Joseph Kent | 169 |
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