Eclectic Magazine: Foreign Literature, Volume 63John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell Leavitt, Throw and Company, 1864 |
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Página 45
... readers . 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 ...
... readers . 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 ...
Página 47
... reader to lapse into a morbid sympathy guide of human action , and a divine con- with the crime of the criminal . Through soler in human sorrows , and the acknowl- the difficulties of this course he has steer edgment of the blessed ...
... reader to lapse into a morbid sympathy guide of human action , and a divine con- with the crime of the criminal . Through soler in human sorrows , and the acknowl- the difficulties of this course he has steer edgment of the blessed ...
Página 49
... reader is a person of high fashion and a great establishment ) , you would not know their faces . You might sleep under the same roof for half a century , and know nothing about them . If they were ill , you would not visit them ...
... reader is a person of high fashion and a great establishment ) , you would not know their faces . You might sleep under the same roof for half a century , and know nothing about them . If they were ill , you would not visit them ...
Página 54
... readers , we can not fail to be struck with the very marked degeneracy . Perhaps the rise of the " Sensation " school may itself be regarded as a reaction from the more tame and quiet style of tale which Mr. Thacke- ray preferred ; and ...
... readers , we can not fail to be struck with the very marked degeneracy . Perhaps the rise of the " Sensation " school may itself be regarded as a reaction from the more tame and quiet style of tale which Mr. Thacke- ray preferred ; and ...
Página 72
... face . These are written on behalf of kindness , and at the expense of truth . They are utterly useless ; tending rather to nau- seate the reader of the over - sweetened | ness 72 [ September , THE MORALS OF LITERATURE .
... face . These are written on behalf of kindness , and at the expense of truth . They are utterly useless ; tending rather to nau- seate the reader of the over - sweetened | ness 72 [ September , THE MORALS OF LITERATURE .
Outras edições - Ver tudo
Eclectic Magazine: Foreign Literature, Volume 40 John Holmes Agnew,Walter Hilliard Bidwell Visualização integral - 1857 |
Eclectic Magazine: Foreign Literature, Volume 18;Volume 81 John Holmes Agnew,Walter Hilliard Bidwell,Henry T. Steele Visualização integral - 1873 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
ancient appear army Austria beautiful Beethoven Cæsar called Catharine Caucasus cause century character Christian church Cicero Circassians course court Crimean war czar death doubt England English Europe eyes fact father favor feeling feet France French friends German give hand heart honor Hortense hundred ical idea interest Khiva king Lady land less letters literature live London look Lord Louis Madame de Sévigné Matthew Boulton means ment mind Molière moral nation nature never once party passed perhaps persons poet Poland political Pompey post-office present Prince produced Provence queen race reader reform reign Roman Russia seems serfs society spirit story Syria Taepings taste thing thought thousand tion Turkey Uncle Toby volume whole words writer young Zollverein
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...