The Eclectic Magazine of Foreign Literature, Science, and Art, Volumen2Leavitt, Trow, & Company, 1844 |
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Página 6
... remains behind . ing toward God , of which we are but the in- Mr. Carlyle comprehends only the individ- struments , but that it is alone from the ual ; the true sense of the unity of the human summit of this collective idea , from the ...
... remains behind . ing toward God , of which we are but the in- Mr. Carlyle comprehends only the individ- struments , but that it is alone from the ual ; the true sense of the unity of the human summit of this collective idea , from the ...
Página 17
... remains collected by his early companion . Mr. Rob- berds considers it as an extraordinary cir- cumstance that the two cleverest boys of the school formed an enthusiastic attachment for each other - we should have thought it stranger if ...
... remains collected by his early companion . Mr. Rob- berds considers it as an extraordinary cir- cumstance that the two cleverest boys of the school formed an enthusiastic attachment for each other - we should have thought it stranger if ...
Página 19
... remains his master- with a Job - like darkness of hints or a Gospel- piece . Taylor's version was the earliest , and like simplicity and brevity . his biographer considers it as the best in our This piece was rapidly followed by other ...
... remains his master- with a Job - like darkness of hints or a Gospel- piece . Taylor's version was the earliest , and like simplicity and brevity . his biographer considers it as the best in our This piece was rapidly followed by other ...
Página 23
... remains of antiquity , and You give me a more favorable account of with the help of the numberless excellent Mackintosh than I have been accustomed to re - translations and ingenious disquisitions ceive . Coleridge has seen much of him ...
... remains of antiquity , and You give me a more favorable account of with the help of the numberless excellent Mackintosh than I have been accustomed to re - translations and ingenious disquisitions ceive . Coleridge has seen much of him ...
Página 59
... remains of the deceased to the grave . " " He was only an obscure per- son , " was the reply , “ and he has died of the cholera . " " Never mind that , " retorted the monarch , " he was one of my children , - for are you not all my ...
... remains of the deceased to the grave . " " He was only an obscure per- son , " was the reply , “ and he has died of the cholera . " " Never mind that , " retorted the monarch , " he was one of my children , - for are you not all my ...
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admiration Ammiel Andrew Marvell appears Assir atmospheric railway Austria Barère beautiful believe body Brittany called canal character Church command court Dalkey dear death doubt Duke duty effect Emperor engine England English eyes Ezela father favor feel fleet France French friends genius German Girondists give hand heart Hippolyte Carnot honor hope Hophin hour human Hume Hume's James Crofton king labor lady Lanfranc less letters literary living London look Lord St means ment miles mind moral mother nation nature never noble Norwich object observed Odin opinion Paris passed Penny Postage perhaps person poor Post-Office postage present Prince de Metternich principle Prussia Ptolemies railway reader remarkable replied Robespierre seems Serapeum speak spirit thing thou thought tion took truth Whig whole words write young