The London Quarterly Review, Volúmenes 69-70Theodore Foster, 1842 |
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Página 6
... doubt , and wonderful , but to our minds not less mel- ancholy : - But the imagination is not the only in- terceptor of affections divinely destined to the pur- poses of action . The understanding may be excited simultaneously , and ...
... doubt , and wonderful , but to our minds not less mel- ancholy : - But the imagination is not the only in- terceptor of affections divinely destined to the pur- poses of action . The understanding may be excited simultaneously , and ...
Página 15
... doubt of objects which attract his attention , it is one of the tendencies of our institutions at the difficult to say that any one class has more present time a tendency which will be coun- power over him than another . Natural ob ...
... doubt of objects which attract his attention , it is one of the tendencies of our institutions at the difficult to say that any one class has more present time a tendency which will be coun- power over him than another . Natural ob ...
Página 19
... doubts and mis- givings , and he pauses before he can regard the superior comforts of the Celtic herdsman with unmixed satisfaction . Still it is but a doubt and an inquiry , not a decision ; and he does not fail to intimate that there ...
... doubts and mis- givings , and he pauses before he can regard the superior comforts of the Celtic herdsman with unmixed satisfaction . Still it is but a doubt and an inquiry , not a decision ; and he does not fail to intimate that there ...
Página 24
... doubt , upon a com- parison of it with other punishments ; but these must be punishments of which we have experience ... doubts whether it could ever be conducted same time to have raised the most serious ishment by death : but , until ...
... doubt , upon a com- parison of it with other punishments ; but these must be punishments of which we have experience ... doubts whether it could ever be conducted same time to have raised the most serious ishment by death : but , until ...
Página 26
... doubt , of a lasting fame , but without any witness of it in this world . Had he died , like Milton , at sixty- six years of age , he would have seen more than the beginnings of it certainly , but he would not have seen it in all the ...
... doubt , of a lasting fame , but without any witness of it in this world . Had he died , like Milton , at sixty- six years of age , he would have seen more than the beginnings of it certainly , but he would not have seen it in all the ...
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