The Eclectic Magazine of Foreign Literature, Science, and Art, Volume 2Leavitt, Trow, & Company, 1844 - American literature |
From inside the book
Results 6-10 of 100
Page 9
... truth and beauty upon the earth , the privileged worshipper of an ideal as yet concealed from the majority : he is almost always sufficiently tormented by his contemporaries , to need a compensation- that of feeling his life in the ...
... truth and beauty upon the earth , the privileged worshipper of an ideal as yet concealed from the majority : he is almost always sufficiently tormented by his contemporaries , to need a compensation- that of feeling his life in the ...
Page 10
... truth , human life regarded from a a fragment of absolute truth , combined with merely individual point of view is a melan- many truths relative to time and place , destin- choly thing . Glory , power , grandeur , all ed to disappear ...
... truth , human life regarded from a a fragment of absolute truth , combined with merely individual point of view is a melan- many truths relative to time and place , destin- choly thing . Glory , power , grandeur , all ed to disappear ...
Page 11
... truth , without hope of realization , is sterile : there is a larger void in our souls , more room for the truth than we can fill during our short terrestrial existence . Break the bond of continuity between ourselves and the genera ...
... truth , without hope of realization , is sterile : there is a larger void in our souls , more room for the truth than we can fill during our short terrestrial existence . Break the bond of continuity between ourselves and the genera ...
Page 12
... truth , absolute or rela- tive . Duty is progressive , as the evolution of the truth ; it is modified and enlarges with ages ; it changes its manifestations according * Mr. Horne , in his Preface to Gregory VII . stances . to the ...
... truth , absolute or rela- tive . Duty is progressive , as the evolution of the truth ; it is modified and enlarges with ages ; it changes its manifestations according * Mr. Horne , in his Preface to Gregory VII . stances . to the ...
Page 13
... truth . Your life must embody have any other . " Here on earth we are as both these truths , must represent and com- soldiers , " he says : -true , but we under- municate them , according to your intelli- stand nothing , nor do we ...
... truth . Your life must embody have any other . " Here on earth we are as both these truths , must represent and com- soldiers , " he says : -true , but we under- municate them , according to your intelli- stand nothing , nor do we ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
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