The North American Review, Volume 29Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge O. Everett, 1829 Vols. 227-230, no. 2 include: Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
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Page 61
... feel as deeply , but whose talents are buried in comparative obscurity ? who think eloquently , who feel that it is within ' them to address eloquent thoughts to their fellow men , but who can never say , with Sheridan , it shall come ...
... feel as deeply , but whose talents are buried in comparative obscurity ? who think eloquently , who feel that it is within ' them to address eloquent thoughts to their fellow men , but who can never say , with Sheridan , it shall come ...
Page 93
... feel the certainty which we do feel of our own existence , and of that of the material world , unless these facts were susceptible of rigorous de- monstration . Facts that are objects of sensation or conscious- ness , possess the ...
... feel the certainty which we do feel of our own existence , and of that of the material world , unless these facts were susceptible of rigorous de- monstration . Facts that are objects of sensation or conscious- ness , possess the ...
Page 233
... feeling in his very soul , that it is the result of strong and natu- ral emotion ; but there are many times when he will feel that the writer has failed of conveying all of it , as it existed in her own breast , to that of the reader ...
... feeling in his very soul , that it is the result of strong and natu- ral emotion ; but there are many times when he will feel that the writer has failed of conveying all of it , as it existed in her own breast , to that of the reader ...
Contents
PRINCIPLES OF ELOCUTION | 38 |
HISTORY of IntellectuAL PHILOSOPHY | 67 |
DE BÉRANngers Life and WRITINGS | 123 |
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