The Eclectic Magazine of Foreign Literature, Science, and Art, Volume 2Leavitt, Trow, & Company, 1844 - American literature |
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Page 1
... writer . We say , our opinion of the writer , - be . Such are our times we cannot at the of his genius and tendencies , rather than of his books , -of the idea which inspires him , rather than of the form with which he chooses to invest ...
... writer . We say , our opinion of the writer , - be . Such are our times we cannot at the of his genius and tendencies , rather than of his books , -of the idea which inspires him , rather than of the form with which he chooses to invest ...
Page 2
... writing these lines , was conscious that he engaged himself to seek a remedy for the evil , nor has he shrunk from ... writer he fills the tribune of an apostle , and it is here that we must judge him . There is a multitude around him ...
... writing these lines , was conscious that he engaged himself to seek a remedy for the evil , nor has he shrunk from ... writer he fills the tribune of an apostle , and it is here that we must judge him . There is a multitude around him ...
Page 3
... writer who machine - tenders ; that the producer , not the has during the last ten years so vigorously production , should form the chief object of attacked the half - gothic , half - pagan edifice social institutions ; that the human ...
... writer who machine - tenders ; that the producer , not the has during the last ten years so vigorously production , should form the chief object of attacked the half - gothic , half - pagan edifice social institutions ; that the human ...
Page 5
... writer's thought . His epithets , although numerous , are seldom without force : they mark a pro- gression in the development of the idea or the qualities of the object . His diction may have faults ; of these we shall not treat here ...
... writer's thought . His epithets , although numerous , are seldom without force : they mark a pro- gression in the development of the idea or the qualities of the object . His diction may have faults ; of these we shall not treat here ...
Page 15
... of the wild horse , who has no other mode of getting at its interior , but who is often permanently lamed in this extraordinary contest . " -Chambers's Ed . Jour . write . ' We hear by and bye that Madoc 1844. ] TO A CHILD , 15 ETC.
... of the wild horse , who has no other mode of getting at its interior , but who is often permanently lamed in this extraordinary contest . " -Chambers's Ed . Jour . write . ' We hear by and bye that Madoc 1844. ] TO A CHILD , 15 ETC.
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admiration Ammiel Andrew Marvell appears Assir atmospheric railway Austria Barère beautiful believe body Brittany called canal character Church command court Dalkey dear death doubt Duke duty effect Emperor engine England English eyes Ezela father favor feel fleet France French friends genius German Girondists give hand heart Hippolyte Carnot honor hope Hophin hour human Hume Hume's James Crofton king labor lady Lanfranc less letters literary living London look Lord St means ment miles mind moral mother nation nature never noble Norwich object observed Odin opinion Paris passed Penny Postage perhaps person poor Post-Office postage present Prince de Metternich principle Prussia Ptolemies railway reader remarkable replied Robespierre seems Serapeum speak spirit thing thou thought tion took truth Whig whole words write young