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 68
... spirit of the age that fashioned its shadowy outline . But poetry is the spirit of the age itself , -embodied in the forms of language , and speaking in a voice that is audible to the external as well as the internal sense . The one ...
... spirit of the age that fashioned its shadowy outline . But poetry is the spirit of the age itself , -embodied in the forms of language , and speaking in a voice that is audible to the external as well as the internal sense . The one ...
Page 201
... spirit , thus separated from the body , may become ob- vious to human sense . Many have considered it enough to say in refutation of this , that the abstract idea we form of spirit implies its want of every quality , which could enable ...
... spirit , thus separated from the body , may become ob- vious to human sense . Many have considered it enough to say in refutation of this , that the abstract idea we form of spirit implies its want of every quality , which could enable ...
Page 278
... spirit through all Christian lands . The same , however , is not necessarily true of devotional or religious poetry . There , the language of poetry is something more than the visible image of a devotional spirit . It is also an ...
... spirit through all Christian lands . The same , however , is not necessarily true of devotional or religious poetry . There , the language of poetry is something more than the visible image of a devotional spirit . It is also an ...
Contents
REFORM IN England | 23 |
DEFENCE OF POETRY | 56 |
SILLIMANS CHEMISTRY | 79 |
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afterwards American appears Audubon beautiful believe birds Boston Bothwell British Cabot cause character Church circumstances Constitution course Darnley declared doubt duties effect England English evidence existence fact favor feeling France French friends George Grenville give Government Greece guilty hand highlands honor House of Commons House of Lords House of Peers human important Indians influence interest John Horne Tooke Johnson Junius King knowledge labor letters Lord Lord Chatham Lorenzo Da Ponte machinery manner Mary ment military mind moral Morton murder Murray nation nature never New-York Nova Scotia object observed opinion Parliament party person poet poetry political present principle Queen question readers reason regard remark respect river St Scotland Sebastian Cabot seems spirit supposed Tecumseh thing thought tion treaty treaty of Ghent tribes United whole writer XXXIV.-No