The North American Review, Band 64Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge O. Everett, 1847 Vols. 227-230, no. 2 include: Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
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Seite 1
... evidently given to every feature the last touches , as if engaged upon a subject worthy of the highest efforts of his chisel . But in the figures at the sides of the vault - door there is something so sweet and touching , such a ...
... evidently given to every feature the last touches , as if engaged upon a subject worthy of the highest efforts of his chisel . But in the figures at the sides of the vault - door there is something so sweet and touching , such a ...
Seite 61
... evidently knows noth- ing more than others about Piozzi's character and standing , his conjectures will not outweigh the judgment which they had better opportunities of forming . As to the Doctor's af- fection , we speak with diffidence ...
... evidently knows noth- ing more than others about Piozzi's character and standing , his conjectures will not outweigh the judgment which they had better opportunities of forming . As to the Doctor's af- fection , we speak with diffidence ...
Seite 62
... evidently feared the time when the intellect would sink under it , leaving him a miserable ruin . Had physical education been understood in his day , he might possibly have been relieved by attention to diet and exercise , which no one ...
... evidently feared the time when the intellect would sink under it , leaving him a miserable ruin . Had physical education been understood in his day , he might possibly have been relieved by attention to diet and exercise , which no one ...
Seite 66
... evidently misled by Bos- well's record , for that worthy did not care to set down any thing but what Johnson said ; the remarks of others were in- troduced only when they served as suggestions for his own . It would have been inhuman to ...
... evidently misled by Bos- well's record , for that worthy did not care to set down any thing but what Johnson said ; the remarks of others were in- troduced only when they served as suggestions for his own . It would have been inhuman to ...
Seite 74
... evidently lead to a most unenviable fame . - a Such was his activity of mind , that he was constantly turn- ing aside from his chosen path of science , to engage in what is now the province of the civil engineer . After writing on the ...
... evidently lead to a most unenviable fame . - a Such was his activity of mind , that he was constantly turn- ing aside from his chosen path of science , to engage in what is now the province of the civil engineer . After writing on the ...
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