The North American Review, Volume 4University of Northern Iowa, 1965 |
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Page 371
... feeling still with thee in my crush'd feelings ' dearth . VII . Yet must I think less wildly : -I have thought Too long and darkly , till my brain became , In its own eddy boiling and o'erwrought , A whirling gulf of phantasy and flame ...
... feeling still with thee in my crush'd feelings ' dearth . VII . Yet must I think less wildly : -I have thought Too long and darkly , till my brain became , In its own eddy boiling and o'erwrought , A whirling gulf of phantasy and flame ...
Page 392
... feeling by which it was prompted.- His proceeding excited a lively and general emotion of momen- tary anger ... feelings then . He experienced inexpressible disquietude . Advancing to the very verge of the Rostrum , and with a ...
... feeling by which it was prompted.- His proceeding excited a lively and general emotion of momen- tary anger ... feelings then . He experienced inexpressible disquietude . Advancing to the very verge of the Rostrum , and with a ...
Page 412
... feelings . And it is evident that unless some peculiar effect is intended to be produced in the reader , all ... feeling of the reader is anticipated , and met with its peculiar language ; and few we believe have ever read it. 412 ...
... feelings . And it is evident that unless some peculiar effect is intended to be produced in the reader , all ... feeling of the reader is anticipated , and met with its peculiar language ; and few we believe have ever read it. 412 ...
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admiration amongst ancient antiquity appear Babylon Beauchamp beautiful Belus bitumen Boston bricks called cement characters classick course Don Paul earth effect eloquence England English errour Euphrates favour feeling Fort Osage French friends Garrick genius give Goethe heart Herodotus Indians inscriptions Italy labour land language learned Leo X less letters live logick Mably Major Rennel manner means ment miles mind musick nature never o'er observed octave Ogilvie opinion orator oratory passed passion perhaps Persepolis Persia philosophical Plato poem poet poetry present publick racters readers reason reeds remarks rhyme river Rostrum ruins scene seems seen semitones shew society soul sounds specimens spirit taste thee thing thou thought tion tower of Babel town truth verse vibrations Werther whole writing young