Eclectic Magazine: Foreign Literature, Volume 2John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell Leavitt, Throw and Company, 1844 |
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Page 2
... readers who commenced with a smile of pity , or scorn of the unintelligible and tiresome jargon , the insinuations , half- ironical , half - wild , of the dark dreamer , now look into his pages , with the perseverance of the monks of ...
... readers who commenced with a smile of pity , or scorn of the unintelligible and tiresome jargon , the insinuations , half- ironical , half - wild , of the dark dreamer , now look into his pages , with the perseverance of the monks of ...
Page 3
... reader always feels that it is a painful duty he fulfils . When he says to a creed or to an institution , " you are rotten , -begone ! " he has always some good word upon what it has achieved in the past , upon its utility , some- times ...
... reader always feels that it is a painful duty he fulfils . When he says to a creed or to an institution , " you are rotten , -begone ! " he has always some good word upon what it has achieved in the past , upon its utility , some- times ...
Page 4
... reader along , he fascinates him . Powerful in imagination , which is apt to dis- cover the sympathetic side of things and to seize its salient point , -expressing himself in an original style , which , though it often ap- pear ...
... reader along , he fascinates him . Powerful in imagination , which is apt to dis- cover the sympathetic side of things and to seize its salient point , -expressing himself in an original style , which , though it often ap- pear ...
Page 9
... reader : has not God waited six thousand years before he created a man to contemplate his works ? " * - Shak- speare himself , when he wrote , " And nothing stands * * * And yet , to times in hope , my verse shall stand't -these men ...
... reader : has not God waited six thousand years before he created a man to contemplate his works ? " * - Shak- speare himself , when he wrote , " And nothing stands * * * And yet , to times in hope , my verse shall stand't -these men ...
Page 12
... reader has paid at- tention to what we have already said . In our view the real problem , which rules all political ... readers for- get it . It has been asked , what is at the present day the duty of which we have spoken so might ...
... reader has paid at- tention to what we have already said . In our view the real problem , which rules all political ... readers for- get it . It has been asked , what is at the present day the duty of which we have spoken so might ...
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Popular passages
Page 333 - There is, sir, but one stage more, which, though turbulent and troublesome, is yet a very short one. Consider, it will soon carry you a great way; it will carry you from earth to heaven ; and there you shall find, to your great joy, the prize to which you hasten, a crown of glory.
Page 315 - Never literary attempt was more unfortunate than my Treatise of Human Nature. It fell dead-born from the press, without reaching such distinction, as even to excite a murmur among the zealots.
Page 271 - Considering what a gracious Prince was next. Have I, in silent wonder, seen such things As pride in slaves, and avarice in kings; no And at a peer, or peeress, shall I fret, Who starves a sister, or forswears a debt?
Page 121 - O Printing! how hast thou disturbed the peace of mankind! That lead, when moulded into bullets, is not so mortal, as when founded into letters. There was a mistake, sure, in the story of Cadmus; and the serpent's teeth, which he sowed, were nothing else but the letters which he invented.
Page 314 - England ; but being frightened with the notion of continuing a narrative through a period of 1700 years, I commenced with the accession of the House of Stuart, an epoch when, I thought, the misrepresentations of faction began chiefly to take place. I was, I own, sanguine in my expectations of the success of this work. I thought that I was the only historian that had at once neglected present power, interest, and authority, and the cry of popular prejudices ; and as the subject was suited to every...
Page 357 - Oh, that I were The viewless spirit of a lovely sound, A living voice, a breathing harmony, A bodiless enjoyment— born and dying With the blest tone which made me ! Enter from below a CHAMOIS HUNTER CHAMOIS HUNTER.
Page 334 - Upon which the child looked very steadfastly upon him. 'Heed, my child, what I say; they will cut off my head , and perhaps make thee a king. But, mark what I say, you must not be a king so long as your brothers Charles and James do live. For they will cut off your brothers' heads, when they can catch them, and cut off thy head too at the last. And therefore, I charge you, do not be made a king by them.
Page 28 - I am grieved that you never met Coleridge : all other men whom I have ever known are mere children to him, and yet all is palsied by a total want of moral strength. He will leave nothing behind him to justify the opinion of his friends to the world ; yet many of his scattered poems are such, that a man of feeling will see that the author was capable of executing the greatest works.
Page 332 - Herbert, one of his attendants, he bade him employ more than usual care in dressing him, and preparing him for so great and joyful a solemnity. Bishop Juxon, a man endowed with the same mild and steady virtues by which the king himself was so much distinguished, assisted him in his devotions, and paid the last melancholy duties to his friend and sovereign.
Page 258 - Then came those days when the most barbarous of all codes was administered by the most barbarous of all tribunals ; when no man could greet his neighbours, or say his prayers, or dress his hair, without danger of committing a capital crime ; when spies lurked in every corner ; when the guillotine was long and hard at work every morning ; when the jails were filled as close as the hold of a slave-ship ; when the gutters ran foaming with blood into the Seine...