The Southern Review, Volume 4A. E. Miller., 1829 - Southern States |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 20
... never lost entirely , either in Europe or Asia , though unskilfully used ; and always continued to be known to the Chi- nese and Eastern nations , whence it was brought to Europe by Marco Polo ; and from the Indian Seas about the same ...
... never lost entirely , either in Europe or Asia , though unskilfully used ; and always continued to be known to the Chi- nese and Eastern nations , whence it was brought to Europe by Marco Polo ; and from the Indian Seas about the same ...
Page 26
... never omitted in England on Christmas day , is undoubtedly Druidical . Gods of the British Isles . ( p . 166. ) Hence to 184 , much learned disquisition , of all shades of truth and verisimilitude.— The etymological proofs of the ...
... never omitted in England on Christmas day , is undoubtedly Druidical . Gods of the British Isles . ( p . 166. ) Hence to 184 , much learned disquisition , of all shades of truth and verisimilitude.— The etymological proofs of the ...
Page 27
... never was the case with any denomination of Christian priesthood . Is Cul- dee and Chaldee the same ? The last memorial of the Culdees was in the church of St. Peter , at York in England , A. D. 936 . Of Iona , Jupiter , Janus , ( the ...
... never was the case with any denomination of Christian priesthood . Is Cul- dee and Chaldee the same ? The last memorial of the Culdees was in the church of St. Peter , at York in England , A. D. 936 . Of Iona , Jupiter , Janus , ( the ...
Page 45
... never been contradicted , so far as we know , by any of his own countrymen , to whom his speci- men of their native language has been so long publicly submitted . According to O'Connor's computation of chronology , which we neither ...
... never been contradicted , so far as we know , by any of his own countrymen , to whom his speci- men of their native language has been so long publicly submitted . According to O'Connor's computation of chronology , which we neither ...
Page 53
... never to have regaled themselves with the famous logomachy about the free- dom of the will in its thousand forms of essay or folio , he may promise himself a sufficient gratification of his curiosity by reading from p . 45 to p . 61. In ...
... never to have regaled themselves with the famous logomachy about the free- dom of the will in its thousand forms of essay or folio , he may promise himself a sufficient gratification of his curiosity by reading from p . 45 to p . 61. In ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
ancient appear arts beautiful become better botany Boulainvilliers called cause Celts character Cicero considered cotyledons cours d'amours Cuba digestion doubt Druids dyspepsia dyspeptic England English enterprize Essex Europe evil existence favour feel France Gaul genius Great-Britain Greek habits Havana Hebrew human Humboldt hundred important improvement increase inhabitants island Kiakhta King knowledge labour language Latin learned Linnæus Lord manner means ment mind Mongolia Mongols moral nations nature never Nostradamus Novel object Ogham opinion passion peculiar perhaps philosophers plants Plautus poetry poets political population possess present principles produce Provençal Raleigh readers remarks Santiago de Cuba scarcely seems shew Sismondi slaves society Southern Review Spain Spanish species spirit stamens stomach sugar supposed taste thing tion Troubadours true truth vegetable wealth whole writers