American Quarterly Review, Volume 20Robert Walsh Carey, Lea & Carey, 1836 - Serial publications |
From inside the book
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Page 36
... turn of expression , the whole contour of their manner , are highly Hebraistic . When you are among these writers , you are among Hebrews , who , though they speak a tongue unknown in the days of Israel's prosperity , have inherited the ...
... turn of expression , the whole contour of their manner , are highly Hebraistic . When you are among these writers , you are among Hebrews , who , though they speak a tongue unknown in the days of Israel's prosperity , have inherited the ...
Page 42
... turns of thought , which were peculiar to the age and country of the writers . The Apocryphal books of the Old Testament , for which the world are indebted to the Alexandrian Jews and their descend- ants , are a valuable help to the ...
... turns of thought , which were peculiar to the age and country of the writers . The Apocryphal books of the Old Testament , for which the world are indebted to the Alexandrian Jews and their descend- ants , are a valuable help to the ...
Page 50
... turn their thoughts to the time of his final coming at the end of the world . The thing , the destruction of the great city , might be design- edly typical of the final change or dissolution of the present material universe . It will be ...
... turn their thoughts to the time of his final coming at the end of the world . The thing , the destruction of the great city , might be design- edly typical of the final change or dissolution of the present material universe . It will be ...
Page 75
Robert Walsh. anticipate more beyond it , than other men ; to turn the faint glimmerings of a future , and the gentle whispers that breathe through the longings of the heart , into the strong assurance of a truth , the entire certainty ...
Robert Walsh. anticipate more beyond it , than other men ; to turn the faint glimmerings of a future , and the gentle whispers that breathe through the longings of the heart , into the strong assurance of a truth , the entire certainty ...
Page 106
... turns , predominant in his eyes and in every feature of his countenance . " * * * * * ( We might almost have divined as much . ) * * * * * * * * * * * * " His other movements were easy and natural , and though he had but little ...
... turns , predominant in his eyes and in every feature of his countenance . " * * * * * ( We might almost have divined as much . ) * * * * * * * * * * * * " His other movements were easy and natural , and though he had but little ...
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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