National Review, Том 3Robert Theobold, 1856 |
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Стр. 32
... rendered by him to his mother and sister , he seems during this year to have been in considerable difficulties about money - matters . It is characteristic of the value of his name , and the confidence reposed in him , that it was ...
... rendered by him to his mother and sister , he seems during this year to have been in considerable difficulties about money - matters . It is characteristic of the value of his name , and the confidence reposed in him , that it was ...
Стр. 42
... rendering its full meaning when himself playing and singing . He was not a great musician , nor was his voice re- markable for its power or compass , though eminently so for softness . It was the fineness and clearness of his ...
... rendering its full meaning when himself playing and singing . He was not a great musician , nor was his voice re- markable for its power or compass , though eminently so for softness . It was the fineness and clearness of his ...
Стр. 43
... render the heart of music ; but it can never be so high an exer- cise of art as when the poet has the full range of nature ; and it is scarcely poetry at all when a man only racks his fancy for something which will go to the tune . The ...
... render the heart of music ; but it can never be so high an exer- cise of art as when the poet has the full range of nature ; and it is scarcely poetry at all when a man only racks his fancy for something which will go to the tune . The ...
Стр. 54
... render back to his countrymen the hardy worth of their ancestors . With each of these good men it fared as it will always fare with doctrinaires in political revolutions : Isocrates , who had spent his life and wasted gallons of ...
... render back to his countrymen the hardy worth of their ancestors . With each of these good men it fared as it will always fare with doctrinaires in political revolutions : Isocrates , who had spent his life and wasted gallons of ...
Стр. 62
... rendered Philip as wary as he was ambitious ; and he would probably , therefore , have lacked the incontroll- able impulse that formed so potent an element in Alexander's character . Mr. Grote , indeed , does justice to Alexander's ...
... rendered Philip as wary as he was ambitious ; and he would probably , therefore , have lacked the incontroll- able impulse that formed so potent an element in Alexander's character . Mr. Grote , indeed , does justice to Alexander's ...
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