The Eclectic Magazine: Foreign Literature, Volume 63 |
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Página 45
His object glides into a strain of irony so polished certainly is to excite in all distrust of that it has often deceived the unthinking themselves , not of others ; and though reader ; anon he kindles with righteous possibly there may ...
His object glides into a strain of irony so polished certainly is to excite in all distrust of that it has often deceived the unthinking themselves , not of others ; and though reader ; anon he kindles with righteous possibly there may ...
Página 50
Neither he nor Mr. Dickens , nor perhaps any one of our literary men , seems able to do justice to the amount of self - denying zeal , earnest faith , and generous liberality expended on these objects . For the most part they attribute ...
Neither he nor Mr. Dickens , nor perhaps any one of our literary men , seems able to do justice to the amount of self - denying zeal , earnest faith , and generous liberality expended on these objects . For the most part they attribute ...
Página 52
... although , perhaps , somewhat dull and prosy when he takes his place in the pulpit , who has none of the graces of oratory , and is little conversant with the subtleties of theol- ogy , is the object of their special admi- ration .
... although , perhaps , somewhat dull and prosy when he takes his place in the pulpit , who has none of the graces of oratory , and is little conversant with the subtleties of theol- ogy , is the object of their special admi- ration .
Página 55
We object , too , to the general moral of Mrs. Wood's good books , in which virtue is always rewarded , and vice always punished . This may be poetic justice , but it is not that which marks God's dealings with men in the present life ...
We object , too , to the general moral of Mrs. Wood's good books , in which virtue is always rewarded , and vice always punished . This may be poetic justice , but it is not that which marks God's dealings with men in the present life ...
Página 75
... that his impression is be done best by a record of sensations reproduced in his work . Of course , acand ideas produced by the scene , or by a cording to the nature of the case , there dry literal catalogue of objects and facts ...
... that his impression is be done best by a record of sensations reproduced in his work . Of course , acand ideas produced by the scene , or by a cording to the nature of the case , there dry literal catalogue of objects and facts ...
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appear beautiful become believe called carried cause century character Christian common course court death doubt early effect England English equal existence expression eyes fact feeling force France French friends give given hand head heart human hundred idea important interest Italy kind king known Lady land late less letters light live London look Lord manner matter means ment mind nature never object once original passed perhaps period persons political present produced question reader remain respect Russia seems seen sense side society spirit stand taken thing thought thousand tion took true turn volume whole writer young
Passagens conhecidas
Página 130 - Artesian wells had been opened, around which, as vegetation thrives luxuriantly, thirty thousand palm-trees and one thousand fruit-trees were planted, and two thriving villages established. At the depth of a little over five hundred feet, an underground river or lake was struck, and from two of them live fish have been thrown up, showing that there was a large body of water underneath. The French government, by this means, hopes to make the route across the desert, to Timbuctoo, fertile, and fit...