The London Quarterly Review, Volúmenes 69-70Theodore Foster, 1842 |
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... thing that proceeds from them : and far be it marked and salient melodies . These things from us to treat Mr. Wordsworth's Sonnets were not to be excluded , but they were otherwise than as parcel of that great body to come as they might ...
... thing that proceeds from them : and far be it marked and salient melodies . These things from us to treat Mr. Wordsworth's Sonnets were not to be excluded , but they were otherwise than as parcel of that great body to come as they might ...
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... things at a distance , according to their effect in story , and not according to their reality in life . Casca , in Shakspeare's play , says of the women who forgave Cæsar , that if Cæsar had stabbed their mothers they would have done ...
... things at a distance , according to their effect in story , and not according to their reality in life . Casca , in Shakspeare's play , says of the women who forgave Cæsar , that if Cæsar had stabbed their mothers they would have done ...
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... things never shuts out from Mr. Wordsworth's mind the con- templation of the whole truth . For the whole . truth received into a poetic mind of the high- est , that is , of the philosophic order , may al- ways take a poetical shape ...
... things never shuts out from Mr. Wordsworth's mind the con- templation of the whole truth . For the whole . truth received into a poetic mind of the high- est , that is , of the philosophic order , may al- ways take a poetical shape ...
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... things unseen , and multiplies In her esteem the thirst that wrought man's The spiritual presences of absent things . ' This kind of knowledge and power , depend- ing immediately upon the imagination , but not to be cast loose from ...
... things unseen , and multiplies In her esteem the thirst that wrought man's The spiritual presences of absent things . ' This kind of knowledge and power , depend- ing immediately upon the imagination , but not to be cast loose from ...
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... things may not prejudice such as are divine , neither that from the unlocking of the gates of sense , and the kindling of a greater natural light , anything of incredulity or intellec- tual night may arise in our minds towards divine ...
... things may not prejudice such as are divine , neither that from the unlocking of the gates of sense , and the kindling of a greater natural light , anything of incredulity or intellec- tual night may arise in our minds towards divine ...
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ammonia ancient animal appear arch architecture beautiful bile Bishop Bishop of Beauvais blood body called carbonic acid carnivora cause character Chouans Christian Church Church of England Church of Rome contain death divine doubt effect Encyclopædia England English faith favour feeling feet fibrine fish flowers France garden give Gothic Gothic architecture Grecian Greece hand holy honour interest Joan King labour less living Lord matter ment mind Miss Burney moral natural never nitrogen object observed oxygen Palenque peculiar perhaps persons plants poet pope Popery present principle produced proteine racter readers Reformation remarkable Rienzi Roman Rome ruins says seems side sion sonnet spirit style substance Temple things thought tion truth ture urea uric acid vegetable whole words young