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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... expression rather of sadness than of poignant grief , a feeling of sympathetic . melancholy steals over you unawares , and you instinctively . raise your eyes once more to see who they were whose last slumbers are guarded by forms of ...
... expression rather of sadness than of poignant grief , a feeling of sympathetic . melancholy steals over you unawares , and you instinctively . raise your eyes once more to see who they were whose last slumbers are guarded by forms of ...
Seite 62
... expressions that appear numerous because Boswell has faithfully recorded them , and has not always stated that it was his own folly which brought down the shower - bath of compliments upon his head . We learn from Miss Reynolds , who ...
... expressions that appear numerous because Boswell has faithfully recorded them , and has not always stated that it was his own folly which brought down the shower - bath of compliments upon his head . We learn from Miss Reynolds , who ...
Seite 64
... expression of his mind . Some of his writings Lord Brougham characterizes as dull and flimsy , in which he has reference principally to the Rambler and Idler , and seems to us to express a hasty and ill - considered opinion . Dull the ...
... expression of his mind . Some of his writings Lord Brougham characterizes as dull and flimsy , in which he has reference principally to the Rambler and Idler , and seems to us to express a hasty and ill - considered opinion . Dull the ...
Seite 77
... expression " sic itur ad astra , " Lord Brougham passes to the Englishman Gibbon , if English he may be called , who prided himself on writing French like a native , and whose joy it was to spend so many of his days at a distance from ...
... expression " sic itur ad astra , " Lord Brougham passes to the Englishman Gibbon , if English he may be called , who prided himself on writing French like a native , and whose joy it was to spend so many of his days at a distance from ...
Seite 95
... expression of the character of the mind , it can hardly be that he was viciously defective in those re- spects , though he may have been misled by partiality or prej- udice in some of his literary opinions . But the great diffi- culty ...
... expression of the character of the mind , it can hardly be that he was viciously defective in those re- spects , though he may have been misled by partiality or prej- udice in some of his literary opinions . But the great diffi- culty ...
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Addison admiration American appears army Becket Boston British character Charles Edward Charles Jared Ingersoll Charles of Anjou Christian church command considered criticism death Decatur dictionary doubt enemy England English English language eyes fame fancy father favor feeling French friends genius Giovanni da Procida give Greek hand heart honor human Indians intellectual interest James Munroe Johnson kará kind king labor land language learned letters literary literature living look Lord Lord Brougham LXIV manner means ment mind moral Morvale nature never original party passed person poem poet poetry Pope preposition present prince readers received remark respect says Schoolcraft seems Sicilian Sicilian Vespers Sicily soon sound spirit Stirling taste thing Thomas à Becket thought tion troops true verse Whig whole words writing York young