National Review, Том 3Robert Theobold, 1856 |
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Стр. 14
... human error , and concludes with some good lines inculcating a general suspense of opinion as the only wise attitude of mind : " Hail , modest Ignorance , thou goal and prize , — Thou last , best knowledge of the simple wise ! Hail ...
... human error , and concludes with some good lines inculcating a general suspense of opinion as the only wise attitude of mind : " Hail , modest Ignorance , thou goal and prize , — Thou last , best knowledge of the simple wise ! Hail ...
Стр. 21
... human absurd- ity , appears to have lost as yet but little of the original freshness of its first application . " Old political and social questions too are ever recurring , and every generation will find that some of the satires of a ...
... human absurd- ity , appears to have lost as yet but little of the original freshness of its first application . " Old political and social questions too are ever recurring , and every generation will find that some of the satires of a ...
Стр. 34
... human face divine . " In our first youth , indeed , when the imagination is awaken- ing , and the intellect and the feelings at once keenly alive and undisciplined and uninformed by realities , this sort of stimu- lant to the fancy ...
... human face divine . " In our first youth , indeed , when the imagination is awaken- ing , and the intellect and the feelings at once keenly alive and undisciplined and uninformed by realities , this sort of stimu- lant to the fancy ...
Стр. 42
... human heart with which he was surrounded . Those social hours which he embellished were the relaxations of the men with whom he lived ; but they were his life . Writing was his business ; but visiting was his occupation . For a great ...
... human heart with which he was surrounded . Those social hours which he embellished were the relaxations of the men with whom he lived ; but they were his life . Writing was his business ; but visiting was his occupation . For a great ...
Стр. 47
... a poet may have imagined , and which he limits himself to reproduce , may be the costume of a past society , or the scenery of a distant land , and he may enliven his poem with subordinate human interest ; but such Thomas Moore . 47.
... a poet may have imagined , and which he limits himself to reproduce , may be the costume of a past society , or the scenery of a distant land , and he may enliven his poem with subordinate human interest ; but such Thomas Moore . 47.
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