English Prose: Eighteenth centurySir Henry Craik Macmillan, 1911 |
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Seite viii
... 265 259 William Wallace 273 278 280 282 284 288 290 J. Bonar . 293 295 296 296 Reginald Brimley Johnson 299 · 303 312 • 314 314 J. Bonar . 317 · 320 321 How Art produces its Effects Remorse The Supreme Tribunal of viii ENGLISH PROSE.
... 265 259 William Wallace 273 278 280 282 284 288 290 J. Bonar . 293 295 296 296 Reginald Brimley Johnson 299 · 303 312 • 314 314 J. Bonar . 317 · 320 321 How Art produces its Effects Remorse The Supreme Tribunal of viii ENGLISH PROSE.
Seite ix
Sir Henry Craik. How Art produces its Effects Remorse The Supreme Tribunal of Conduct Power sacrificed to Selfishness Public Benefit promoted by Individual Aims . THOMAS WARTON . Feudalism Chaucer's House of Fame Gower's Mistakes ...
Sir Henry Craik. How Art produces its Effects Remorse The Supreme Tribunal of Conduct Power sacrificed to Selfishness Public Benefit promoted by Individual Aims . THOMAS WARTON . Feudalism Chaucer's House of Fame Gower's Mistakes ...
Seite 25
... produced his most remarkable philosophical works - the New Theory of Vision in 1709 , the Principles of Human Knowledge in 1710 , and the Dialogues of Hylas and Philonous in 1713. In the last named year he went to London , where Swift ...
... produced his most remarkable philosophical works - the New Theory of Vision in 1709 , the Principles of Human Knowledge in 1710 , and the Dialogues of Hylas and Philonous in 1713. In the last named year he went to London , where Swift ...
Seite 30
... produce so much as one argument against the reality of corporeal things , or in behalf of that avowed utter ignorance of their natures , which doth not suppose their reality to consist in an external absolute existence ? Upon this ...
... produce so much as one argument against the reality of corporeal things , or in behalf of that avowed utter ignorance of their natures , which doth not suppose their reality to consist in an external absolute existence ? Upon this ...
Seite 31
... produced great philosophers who have undeceived the world , and proved to a demonstration that private vices are public benefits . This discovery was reserved to our times , and our sect hath the glory of it . " Crito . " It is possible ...
... produced great philosophers who have undeceived the world , and proved to a demonstration that private vices are public benefits . This discovery was reserved to our times , and our sect hath the glory of it . " Crito . " It is possible ...
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