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 58
... writers have followed him into the field which he had opened ; Brown and Lord Mahon in England , and two in Germany . But as he was the first , so he continues to be the best ; and the enthusiasm which he brought to the beginning of his ...
... writers have followed him into the field which he had opened ; Brown and Lord Mahon in England , and two in Germany . But as he was the first , so he continues to be the best ; and the enthusiasm which he brought to the beginning of his ...
Seite 59
... writer , powerful as he is , has not , in every respect , the best qualifications for such a work ; but the reader is sure of find- ing independent views and valuable information ; and if there should be a measure of prejudice and ...
... writer , powerful as he is , has not , in every respect , the best qualifications for such a work ; but the reader is sure of find- ing independent views and valuable information ; and if there should be a measure of prejudice and ...
Seite 60
... writer's portrait - painting proceeds from an occasional waywardness and haste , which lead him into views and representations which his slower judgment would have disapproved . We need not go far for an illustra- tion of the truth of ...
... writer's portrait - painting proceeds from an occasional waywardness and haste , which lead him into views and representations which his slower judgment would have disapproved . We need not go far for an illustra- tion of the truth of ...
Seite 61
... writer , in his estimate of John- son , makes sufficient allowance for the effect of the disease which hung like a millstone round his neck through all his mortal existence , a disease which brings with it every form . of gloom and ...
... writer , in his estimate of John- son , makes sufficient allowance for the effect of the disease which hung like a millstone round his neck through all his mortal existence , a disease which brings with it every form . of gloom and ...
Seite 66
... right appreciation of this world's honors by attaching more importance to his worth than to his fame . Certainly this is high praise , and such as few can ever deserve . But we do not see in this writer 66 [ Jan. Brougham's Lives of.
... right appreciation of this world's honors by attaching more importance to his worth than to his fame . Certainly this is high praise , and such as few can ever deserve . But we do not see in this writer 66 [ Jan. Brougham's Lives of.
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