The North American Review, Volumes 38-39O. Everett, 1834 |
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Page 4
... true : his prevailing feeling was despair of salvation ; but it is evident that the fierce agony of his disease , and not his religion , was the source and origin of that despair . It being admitted , then , that no views of relig- ion ...
... true : his prevailing feeling was despair of salvation ; but it is evident that the fierce agony of his disease , and not his religion , was the source and origin of that despair . It being admitted , then , that no views of relig- ion ...
Page 18
... true character of those alternations of joy and despondency , of levity and seriousness , naturally enough connected with correspondent frames of thought , to which his narrative continually refers . ' ' In cases where the sympathy ...
... true character of those alternations of joy and despondency , of levity and seriousness , naturally enough connected with correspondent frames of thought , to which his narrative continually refers . ' ' In cases where the sympathy ...
Page 28
... true , that fierce and angry sarcasm is a very injudicious way of expressing generous emo- We see very little of it in the letters of Cowper , where he pours out his soul without reserve , and we hardly know how to account for his ...
... true , that fierce and angry sarcasm is a very injudicious way of expressing generous emo- We see very little of it in the letters of Cowper , where he pours out his soul without reserve , and we hardly know how to account for his ...
Page 36
... true nature and purposes of botanical classification , which has given rise to a fatal jealousy among men zealously devoted to the cul- tivation of the same pursuit , and lain like a blight on the growth of this beautiful science ...
... true nature and purposes of botanical classification , which has given rise to a fatal jealousy among men zealously devoted to the cul- tivation of the same pursuit , and lain like a blight on the growth of this beautiful science ...
Page 44
... true nature of the organs . Before we can decide any ques- tion as to the relative importance of the organs , we need some means of distinguishing the organs themselves , and recognising their true nature , under all the modifications ...
... true nature of the organs . Before we can decide any ques- tion as to the relative importance of the organs , we need some means of distinguishing the organs themselves , and recognising their true nature , under all the modifications ...
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