The North American Review, Band 41Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge O. Everett, 1835 Vols. 227-230, no. 2 include: Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
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Seite 338
... mind , differing in capacity , not in nature , from the human , is necessarily attended by an increase of capacity in the mind to which this knowledge is conveyed . When the sublime idea of Infinite Power has dawned upon the soul , it ...
... mind , differing in capacity , not in nature , from the human , is necessarily attended by an increase of capacity in the mind to which this knowledge is conveyed . When the sublime idea of Infinite Power has dawned upon the soul , it ...
Seite 418
... mind and heart . We will not contend for the preeminence of these studies . Every one , which brings the mind into action , will do good . But the great thing is to find such studies , as may bring the mind into willing and cheer- ful ...
... mind and heart . We will not contend for the preeminence of these studies . Every one , which brings the mind into action , will do good . But the great thing is to find such studies , as may bring the mind into willing and cheer- ful ...
Seite 419
... mind will sympathize with it . In a great proportion of those cases , in which the young mind is thought to be making ruin- ous efforts , the mind is as inactive as the form . There is some easy play of memory which counterfeits mental ...
... mind will sympathize with it . In a great proportion of those cases , in which the young mind is thought to be making ruin- ous efforts , the mind is as inactive as the form . There is some easy play of memory which counterfeits mental ...
Inhalt
ᎪᎡᎢ PAGE | 9 |
THE AMERICAN ALMANAC | 28 |
MEMOIRS OF CASANOVA | 46 |
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