The Eclectic Magazine of Foreign Literature, Science, and Art, Volume 2Leavitt, Trow, & Company, 1844 - American literature |
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Page 11
Give him the past - give him a day . The intellectual adoration of truth , power , an idea , something which has tri- without hope of realization , is sterile : there umphed and borne its fruits - so that , placed is a larger void in ...
Give him the past - give him a day . The intellectual adoration of truth , power , an idea , something which has tri- without hope of realization , is sterile : there umphed and borne its fruits - so that , placed is a larger void in ...
Page 12
How will you give him more time and more energy to develope his faculties , except by lessening the number of his hours of labor , and increasing his profits ? How can you render his contact with the enlightened class- es serviceable to ...
How will you give him more time and more energy to develope his faculties , except by lessening the number of his hours of labor , and increasing his profits ? How can you render his contact with the enlightened class- es serviceable to ...
Page 16
It will be more interesting to give the classification which Mr. Fergusson's extensive observations have en- abled him to make of these caverns , and his In connexion with the subject , Mr. Fergusson conclusions on their chronological ...
It will be more interesting to give the classification which Mr. Fergusson's extensive observations have en- abled him to make of these caverns , and his In connexion with the subject , Mr. Fergusson conclusions on their chronological ...
Page 19
... if fugitive verses ceived to belong to a much more modern and articles so published should happen to era , and these therefore give an air of patch- bring him a considerable addition of no - work and falsification to both Taylor's ...
... if fugitive verses ceived to belong to a much more modern and articles so published should happen to era , and these therefore give an air of patch- bring him a considerable addition of no - work and falsification to both Taylor's ...
Page 23
295–298 . to be satisfied without very extensive ex- ploration of the remains of antiquity , and You give me a more favorable account of with the help of the numberless excellent Mackintosh than I have been accustomed to re ...
295–298 . to be satisfied without very extensive ex- ploration of the remains of antiquity , and You give me a more favorable account of with the help of the numberless excellent Mackintosh than I have been accustomed to re ...
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admiration appears Barère beauty become believe body brought called carried cause character Church continued course court death doubt duty effect England English existence expression eyes fact feel France French friends genius give given ground hand head heart honor hope hour human important interest Italy king less letters light living look Lord means ment mind nature never object observed once opinion passed perhaps period person poor present Prince principle produced question reader reason received remains remarkable respect seems side soon speak spirit thing thought tion took true truth turned whole write young