The North American Review, Volume 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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Page 20
... human weakness , that great movements of reformation are apt , in some respects , to pass to extremes . How much has not one of the sublimest arts , which human skill has ever wrought out and perfected , suffered by having its most ...
... human weakness , that great movements of reformation are apt , in some respects , to pass to extremes . How much has not one of the sublimest arts , which human skill has ever wrought out and perfected , suffered by having its most ...
Page 333
... human nature , ―the sense of dependence on a su- perintending power . It is a principle far beyond the sneer and sarcasm of infidelity . It is developed in the hymn of the Scot- tish soldiers on the eve of battle , and in the devotion ...
... human nature , ―the sense of dependence on a su- perintending power . It is a principle far beyond the sneer and sarcasm of infidelity . It is developed in the hymn of the Scot- tish soldiers on the eve of battle , and in the devotion ...
Page 472
... human mind , than the extraordinary advances which have been made , and which are now in more vigorous progress than ever , in that noble study , the revelation of God to man , by his works . What a bound the human mind has made since ...
... human mind , than the extraordinary advances which have been made , and which are now in more vigorous progress than ever , in that noble study , the revelation of God to man , by his works . What a bound the human mind has made since ...
Contents
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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