The North American Review, Volume 82O. Everett, 1856 Vols. 227-230, no. 2 include: Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 89
Page 36
... true traveller knows a better use of his opportunities , and a better cure for his solitude . He hails the friendly necessity of the storm , the confinement and the limited range of his resources , as strong incentives to en- terprise ...
... true traveller knows a better use of his opportunities , and a better cure for his solitude . He hails the friendly necessity of the storm , the confinement and the limited range of his resources , as strong incentives to en- terprise ...
Page 320
... true , would point out the state of the public taste with respect to style , as the surest test among any people of the general improvement which their intellectual powers have received ; and which , when applied to our Transatlantic ...
... true , would point out the state of the public taste with respect to style , as the surest test among any people of the general improvement which their intellectual powers have received ; and which , when applied to our Transatlantic ...
Page 324
... true instinct of the gentleman is equally discernible . There is an absence of exaggeration , of per- sonal intrusion , of partial estimates , of narrow prejudices , and of critical assumption , which , from the negative excellence of ...
... true instinct of the gentleman is equally discernible . There is an absence of exaggeration , of per- sonal intrusion , of partial estimates , of narrow prejudices , and of critical assumption , which , from the negative excellence of ...
Contents
BARTOLS PICTURES OF EUROPE | 33 |
STATISTICS OF INSANITY IN MASSACHUSETTS | 78 |
SYDNEY SMITH | 100 |
22 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
admiration alcohol appeared assertion beauty become Bishop Boston Boyars called century character Charles Reade Christian Church classes colonies Company contain declaration doctrine early edition Elijah Hedding England English Europe European fact families feeling force foreign Fort Bridger France French furnish genius German Girondists give grivna Holy Alliance honor Humboldt Mountains hundred India insane intellectual interest Ipsden Jacobin Club labor land latter less literary literature living LXXXII means ment miles Milton mind Monroe Monroe Doctrine moral mountain nation native nature never object original Paradise Lost Paris peculiar Peg Woffington persons poems poet poetic poetry political possessions present princes principle reader regard respect reviewer Russian society Spain Spanish American spirit taste territory thought tion United VĂ©ron volume Wheaton whole writers York