American Quarterly Review, Issues 39-40Carey, Lea & Carey, 1836 - Serial publications |
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Page 49
... thing , may be employed allegorically , as well as words . Of this figure , Bishop Lowth reckons three kinds : first ... things may be employed allegorically , as well as words . The royal charac- ter and the dominion of David might be ...
... thing , may be employed allegorically , as well as words . Of this figure , Bishop Lowth reckons three kinds : first ... things may be employed allegorically , as well as words . The royal charac- ter and the dominion of David might be ...
Page 50
... thing , the destruction of the great city , might be design- edly typical of the final change or dissolution of the ... things of which a description is given in literal language , are them- selves representatives of other things , on ...
... thing , the destruction of the great city , might be design- edly typical of the final change or dissolution of the ... things of which a description is given in literal language , are them- selves representatives of other things , on ...
Page 52
... thing seen and described by the writer must have reference to some specific and corresponding event , which was future at the time of the composition of the book . They have , accordingly , undertaken to study each chapter and verse ...
... thing seen and described by the writer must have reference to some specific and corresponding event , which was future at the time of the composition of the book . They have , accordingly , undertaken to study each chapter and verse ...
Page 53
... thing correspondent to all the separate and de- tached images there presented to the mind , some of them have rejected the whole as a sealed book ; while others , of keener optics , and more confidence in their own imaginations , have ...
... thing correspondent to all the separate and de- tached images there presented to the mind , some of them have rejected the whole as a sealed book ; while others , of keener optics , and more confidence in their own imaginations , have ...
Page 62
who looks at every thing in the inspired volume as addressed , simply or principally , to the intellect or ratiocinative faculty . Hahn lays it down as a fundamental principle , that the inter- preter of holy writings should be himself ...
who looks at every thing in the inspired volume as addressed , simply or principally , to the intellect or ratiocinative faculty . Hahn lays it down as a fundamental principle , that the inter- preter of holy writings should be himself ...
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American appear Bay of Fundy beautiful boundary brain British cerebellum cerebrum character Claude Frollo Coleridge common constitution course Croix direction Dorset English fact faculties feeling genius give Hartley Coleridge head heart highlands honour hope human important influence instruction intellectual interest islands king knowledge labour Lafayette lake land language look majesty's government matter means ment mind moral nation nature never northwest angle Nova Scotia object observed ocean opinion organs original party passage peculiar Pellico persons philosophy phrenologists Pierre Gringoire poet poetry political present principles Quasimodo question racter reader remark river St sacred scene seems sentiment Sir Charles Slave Lake soul spirit thing thought tion treaty of 1783 treaty of Ghent true truth whole words writings