The North American Review, Band 32O. Everett, 1831 Vols. 227-230, no. 2 include: Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
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Seite 1
... object . It is not worth so much trouble , to imitate that , which we have constantly under our eyes . The true worth of art is , to develope that , which in nature is never found united in one object . For this reason , those , who ...
... object . It is not worth so much trouble , to imitate that , which we have constantly under our eyes . The true worth of art is , to develope that , which in nature is never found united in one object . For this reason , those , who ...
Seite 64
... object . Our own country partakes deeply of this spirit , and everywhere throughout our extended regions , vast efforts are making to diffuse the means of education and improvement among all classes of society . We had hoped , that with ...
... object . Our own country partakes deeply of this spirit , and everywhere throughout our extended regions , vast efforts are making to diffuse the means of education and improvement among all classes of society . We had hoped , that with ...
Seite 217
... object of the patriotic and judicious is to give efficiency to the opposite element of law . But if we even admit , that the work of Smith contains some errors of con- siderable importance , resulting from the cause to which we have ...
... object of the patriotic and judicious is to give efficiency to the opposite element of law . But if we even admit , that the work of Smith contains some errors of con- siderable importance , resulting from the cause to which we have ...
Inhalt
ANATOMY Address to the Community on the Necessity | 64 |
CLARENCE A Tale of our Own Times By the Author | 73 |
HIEROGLYPHICS Essay on the Hieroglyphic System of M Cham | 95 |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Akerblad Amos Eaton amount ancient appear assignats Athenian Athens Attica Bank Bank of England beauty bills Boston Britain British Cambreleng cent Champollion character circulation coin commercial common Congress course creditor currency debtor depreciation dollars duties effect England equal Europe exchange existence exports favor feeling foreign French French language Geology give gold and silver Government Greece Guy Mannering hieroglyphical hundred hyæna important imprisonment for debt increase individuals institutions interest Jews labor language less Madame de Genlis Mc Duffie ment metals millions mind moral nations nature navigation never New-York novel Oberlin object Old Mortality opinion oviparous paper persons physicians political possess present principles produce profession Ptolemy readers received regard remarks respect Roman specie supposed thing thousand tion tonnage tons trade truth United Waldbach whole writer XXXII.-NO