The North American Review, Том 70Jared Sparks, James Russell Lowell, Edward Everett, Henry Cabot Lodge O. Everett, 1850 Vols. 227-230, no. 2 include: Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
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... mind has been unusually active , if there have been few elabo- rate works especially devoted to criticism , the electric fluid has been imperceptibly carried off from a thousand minor points , in the form of essays and periodical ...
... mind has been unusually active , if there have been few elabo- rate works especially devoted to criticism , the electric fluid has been imperceptibly carried off from a thousand minor points , in the form of essays and periodical ...
Страница 12
... mind . He cried , " God's grace be with thee still , O Lady mother dear ! O mother , you would sorrow , if you looked upon me here ; For my neck is bound with chains , and I live in grief and fear , Like a traitor by my brethren sold ...
... mind . He cried , " God's grace be with thee still , O Lady mother dear ! O mother , you would sorrow , if you looked upon me here ; For my neck is bound with chains , and I live in grief and fear , Like a traitor by my brethren sold ...
Страница 32
... man , - not so terrible for its operation on the body as on the mind . Under its baneful influence , literature - - lost its free and healthy action ; and , however 32 [ Jan. Ticknor's History of Spanish Literature .
... man , - not so terrible for its operation on the body as on the mind . Under its baneful influence , literature - - lost its free and healthy action ; and , however 32 [ Jan. Ticknor's History of Spanish Literature .
Страница 34
... mind was enslaved in Spain , but how grievously it had become cramped and crippled by the chains it had so long worn . " But we shall be greatly in error , if , as we notice these deep marks and strange peculiarities in Spanish ...
... mind was enslaved in Spain , but how grievously it had become cramped and crippled by the chains it had so long worn . " But we shall be greatly in error , if , as we notice these deep marks and strange peculiarities in Spanish ...
Страница 38
... mind , that this delightful romance was not the result of a youthful exuberance of feeling and a happy ex- ternal condition , nor composed in his best years , when the spirits of its author were light and his hopes high ; but that with ...
... mind , that this delightful romance was not the result of a youthful exuberance of feeling and a happy ex- ternal condition , nor composed in his best years , when the spirits of its author were light and his hopes high ; but that with ...
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Чести термини и фразе
Albigenses ALEXIS ancient army Austria beautiful Béziers Boston Buxton Castilian Cathari Catharist cause century character Christian Church civilization command Count of Toulouse Croatians Dalmatia Danube death Diet divine doctrines emperor empire England established Europe evil existence faith favor feeling France freedom French friends German Goldsmith Greek Gyula heart heretics Hungarian Hungary Ilka independence influence inhabitants John Bartram king Kossuth labor land language literary literature live Lope de Vega Lord Magyars mind nature never NIKETAS nobility nobles object Panslavism party passed peasants peculiar perfect Pierre de Castelnau poet political popular population present principle prison race reader religion religious republican Russia says sect seems Servians Slavonians Slavonic Sleswick Slowack souls South Wales spirit success sympathy Szeklers thee thing thou thought Ticknor tion Transylvania Wallachians whole writer
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Страница 387 - Lo, these are parts of his ways: but how little a portion is heard of him? but the thunder of his power who can understand?
Страница 30 - ... the human mind was enslaved in Spain, but how grievously it had become cramped and crippled by the chains it had so long worn. But we shall be greatly in error, if, as we notice these deep marks and strange peculiarities in Spanish literature, we suppose they were produced by the direct action either of the Inquisition or of the civil government of the country, compressing, as if with a physical power, the whole circle of society. This would have been impossible. No nation would have submitted...
Страница 268 - It seemed to be his intention to blurt out whatever was in his mind, and see what would become of it. He was angry, too, when catched in an absurdity; but it did not prevent him from falling into another the next minute.
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Страница 8 - On the first night after the outrage, Jusuf, as he is called in the poem, when travelling along in charge of a negro, passes a cemetery on a hill-side where his mother lies buried. " And when the negro heeded not, that guarded him behind, From off the camel Jusuf sprang, on which he rode confined, And hastened, with all speed, his mother's grave to find, Where he knelt and pardon sought, to relieve his troubled mind. " He cried, ' God's grace be with thee still, O Lady mother dear!
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Страница 164 - The inhabitants of this country are the miserablest people in the world. The Hodmadods of Monomatapa, though a nasty people yet for wealth are gentlemen to these, who have no houses and skin garments, sheep, poultry, and fruits of the earth, ostrich eggs etc.
Страница 213 - ... excursions all round, and to return to his house at night One thing I must desire of thee, and do insist that thee must oblige me therein: that thou make up that drugget clothes, to go to Virginia in, and not appear to disgrace thyself or me; for though I should not esteem thee the less to come to me in what dress thou...
Страница 151 - Wit was originally a general name for all the intellectual powers, meaning the faculty which kens, perceives, knows, understands ; it was gradually narrowed in its signification to express merely the resemblance between ideas ; and lastly, to note that resemblance when it occasioned ludicrous surprise.