North-American Review and Miscellaneous Journal, Volume 12Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge Wells and Lilly, 1821 Vols. 277-230, no. 2 include Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
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Page 6
... truth , Salve ! magna Parens Frugum , Saturnia tellus , magna , virum ! If there be any feeling , merely national , which can com- pare with this , it should be that which corresponds to it ; the complacency , with which it were to be ...
... truth , Salve ! magna Parens Frugum , Saturnia tellus , magna , virum ! If there be any feeling , merely national , which can com- pare with this , it should be that which corresponds to it ; the complacency , with which it were to be ...
Page 22
... truths in the school of experience . Such is their obstinacy , that they will learn them no where else . The events of the year 1819 have taught us lessons of the most impressive character . If we do not profit by them , we deserve to ...
... truths in the school of experience . Such is their obstinacy , that they will learn them no where else . The events of the year 1819 have taught us lessons of the most impressive character . If we do not profit by them , we deserve to ...
Page 43
... truth admirable in her duties and her judgments . I wait a longer acquaintance to describe her to you ; and I will do the same with respect to Voltaire , for I have learned to beware of prepossession . It is for instance a great ...
... truth admirable in her duties and her judgments . I wait a longer acquaintance to describe her to you ; and I will do the same with respect to Voltaire , for I have learned to beware of prepossession . It is for instance a great ...
Page 53
... truth is after all that the Henriade is a much better poem than is generally supposed by those , who , without having read it , take their opinion of it from critics who are probably in the same predicament . In France , though it is ...
... truth is after all that the Henriade is a much better poem than is generally supposed by those , who , without having read it , take their opinion of it from critics who are probably in the same predicament . In France , though it is ...
Page 55
... truth is , that genius ennobles and beautifies every form , so that the question is entirely of a secondary character , which of two given forms is abstractedly superior . And as to the question itself , such as it is , we must needs ...
... truth is , that genius ennobles and beautifies every form , so that the question is entirely of a secondary character , which of two given forms is abstractedly superior . And as to the question itself , such as it is , we must needs ...
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