The North American Review, Volume 34O. Everett, 1832 Vols. 227-230, no. 2 include: Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
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Page 59
... nature . It consists not in what nature has given to the body , but in what nature and education have given to the mind - not in the world around us , but in the world within us - not in the circumstances of fortune , but in the ...
... nature . It consists not in what nature has given to the body , but in what nature and education have given to the mind - not in the world around us , but in the world within us - not in the circumstances of fortune , but in the ...
Page 65
... nature , and what is true to fact . From the very nature of things , neither poetry nor any one of the imitative arts , can in itself be false . They can be false no farther than , by the imperfection of human skill , they convey to our ...
... nature , and what is true to fact . From the very nature of things , neither poetry nor any one of the imitative arts , can in itself be false . They can be false no farther than , by the imperfection of human skill , they convey to our ...
Page 85
... natural and artificial . There are many chemical compounds made by art , which , as far as we are informed , do not exist in nature , and there are many natural bodies which art has not yet been able to imitate . ' Vol . I. Introduction ...
... natural and artificial . There are many chemical compounds made by art , which , as far as we are informed , do not exist in nature , and there are many natural bodies which art has not yet been able to imitate . ' Vol . I. Introduction ...
Contents
REFORM IN England | 23 |
DEFENCE OF POETRY | 56 |
SILLIMANS CHEMISTRY | 79 |
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