The Foreign Quarterly Review, Volume 8T. Foster, 1831 |
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Page 5
... supposed , are symptomatic of no great progress in the graver studies to which the attention of Oehlenschläger should have been directed . In Greek he utterly failed . Had he been allowed to commence with Homer , or Herodotus , or even ...
... supposed , are symptomatic of no great progress in the graver studies to which the attention of Oehlenschläger should have been directed . In Greek he utterly failed . Had he been allowed to commence with Homer , or Herodotus , or even ...
Page 22
... supposed license which it affords to sudden and violent revolutions of feeling - a conve- nient principle for illustrating the conflict of duties . " The father softens , " says the Governor of Tilbury , in the Critic , " but the ...
... supposed license which it affords to sudden and violent revolutions of feeling - a conve- nient principle for illustrating the conflict of duties . " The father softens , " says the Governor of Tilbury , in the Critic , " but the ...
Page 54
... supposed case of an attempt by Charles the Tenth , when he should succeed to the throne , to restore absolute mon- archy in France , “ it is impossible to say what we may be called upon to do . " § - It is to be observed that we are now ...
... supposed case of an attempt by Charles the Tenth , when he should succeed to the throne , to restore absolute mon- archy in France , “ it is impossible to say what we may be called upon to do . " § - It is to be observed that we are now ...
Page 82
... supposed to say , to this effect in a calm sedate tone- " The narratives which have been transmitted to us as the early history of Rome are improbable in themselves , and at variance with what we know to have been the state of society ...
... supposed to say , to this effect in a calm sedate tone- " The narratives which have been transmitted to us as the early history of Rome are improbable in themselves , and at variance with what we know to have been the state of society ...
Page 92
... supposed , for the edification of their fellow citizens , but with the laudable desire of elevating the Roman name and nation in the eyes of the supercilious and vain - glorious Greeks . As the power of Rome and the use of the Latin lan ...
... supposed , for the edification of their fellow citizens , but with the laudable desire of elevating the Roman name and nation in the eyes of the supercilious and vain - glorious Greeks . As the power of Rome and the use of the Latin lan ...
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