The North American Review, Τόμος 64Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge O. Everett, 1847 Vols. 227-230, no. 2 include: Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
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Σελίδα 65
... matter at once in all its bearings ; no mysticism nor illusion can stand for a moment before him ; but so far from giving a cold dissection of the question pre- sented , his views are made interesting by the finest possible ...
... matter at once in all its bearings ; no mysticism nor illusion can stand for a moment before him ; but so far from giving a cold dissection of the question pre- sented , his views are made interesting by the finest possible ...
Σελίδα 66
... matter in a differ- ent light ; and these were like all other conversations , in which each one took his share ... matters both small and great , and that his habit- ual piety , his sense of his own unworthiness , and his generally ...
... matter in a differ- ent light ; and these were like all other conversations , in which each one took his share ... matters both small and great , and that his habit- ual piety , his sense of his own unworthiness , and his generally ...
Σελίδα 82
... matter or style , but simply because the great majority of readers have no delight in books that are long , he was in doubt whether to proceed , or to close the history with the fall of the Western Empire . But the same necessity which ...
... matter or style , but simply because the great majority of readers have no delight in books that are long , he was in doubt whether to proceed , or to close the history with the fall of the Western Empire . But the same necessity which ...
Σελίδα 83
... matter of reproach . One can hardly conceive what his habits of thought must have been , to see nothing ob- jectionable in his account of Theodora , for example . Even when Porson thundered out his anathema , Gibbon seemed more disposed ...
... matter of reproach . One can hardly conceive what his habits of thought must have been , to see nothing ob- jectionable in his account of Theodora , for example . Even when Porson thundered out his anathema , Gibbon seemed more disposed ...
Σελίδα 93
... matter , and it seemed as if Æolus had let loose the winds to fan the flame which threatened to consume the wights whose free- dom of speech , or rather whose known opinions , had kin- dled it . There are some who melt away under the ...
... matter , and it seemed as if Æolus had let loose the winds to fan the flame which threatened to consume the wights whose free- dom of speech , or rather whose known opinions , had kin- dled it . There are some who melt away under the ...
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