The Foreign Review, Том 5Black, Young, and Young, 1830 |
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Страница 56
... Roman , will prove the turning weight in the scales of Muscovite and British diplomacy - has attached her interests to the fortunes of the northern Autocrat ; -nay , by the acuteness of her agent Müffling , has been mainly instrumental ...
... Roman , will prove the turning weight in the scales of Muscovite and British diplomacy - has attached her interests to the fortunes of the northern Autocrat ; -nay , by the acuteness of her agent Müffling , has been mainly instrumental ...
Страница 65
... Roman jurisprudence to a classical scholar : * he recom- mended the study by his precepts , as well as by his example ; and the importance of classical learning to the civilian , was equally well understood by his contemporaries ...
... Roman jurisprudence to a classical scholar : * he recom- mended the study by his precepts , as well as by his example ; and the importance of classical learning to the civilian , was equally well understood by his contemporaries ...
Страница 66
... Roman law after the siege of Amalfi ; and we shall add another specimen of the " All the inferences which have been so plentifully drawn from a very dubious fact . world knows , " says Lord Kames , " that the Roman law , after being ...
... Roman law after the siege of Amalfi ; and we shall add another specimen of the " All the inferences which have been so plentifully drawn from a very dubious fact . world knows , " says Lord Kames , " that the Roman law , after being ...
Страница 68
... Roman law , and was attended by many students , poor as well as rich , he composed at the suggestion of the poor , that is , the poorer class of his own pupils , a compendious treatise in nine books , extracted from the Code and ...
... Roman law , and was attended by many students , poor as well as rich , he composed at the suggestion of the poor , that is , the poorer class of his own pupils , a compendious treatise in nine books , extracted from the Code and ...
Страница 69
... Roman law in England . John of Salisbury , a remarkable writer for the age in which he lived , has likewise furnished us with a short but valuable notice of Vacarius . " Tempore regis Stephani a regno jussae sunt leges Romanae , quas in ...
... Roman law in England . John of Salisbury , a remarkable writer for the age in which he lived , has likewise furnished us with a short but valuable notice of Vacarius . " Tempore regis Stephani a regno jussae sunt leges Romanae , quas in ...
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ancient Animal Magnetism appear Bentham body canon law character church civil law common Comparative Anatomy court Cuvier declared diamond Doctors Commons emperor England English Euripides eyes Father favour feel foreign France friends genius Germany give hand heart honour Humour Ignatius influence interest Jesuits judges Juris justice king knowledge labour lawyers learned lectures less look magnetiser manner Marquis de Puységur matter means ment Mesmer mind minister Montaigne moral nature never Niccolini object observed opinion Pandects Paris passage patients persons philosophy poems poet police possess present Prince prove Raby readers reason regard religion remarks respect Richter Roman Roman law Rovigo says seems Sir Thomas somnambulism somnambulists soul speak species spirit Stolberg supposed thee things thou tion translation truth Vacarius volume whole writings
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Страница 137 - The roar of waters ! — from the headlong height Velino cleaves the wave-worn precipice The fall of waters ! rapid as the light The flashing mass foams shaking the abyss ; The hell of waters ! where they howl and hiss. And boil in endless torture ; while the sweat Of their great agony, wrung out from this Their Phlegethon, curls round the rocks of jet That gird the gulf around, in pitiless horror set...
Страница 138 - It is not lessen'd ; but thy mind, Expanded by the genius of the spot, Has grown colossal, and can only find A fit abode wherein appear enshrined Thy hopes of immortality ; and thou Shalt one day, if found worthy, so defined, See thy God face to face, as thou dost now His Holy of Holies, nor be blasted by his brow.
Страница 453 - Tis that enamoured Nightingale Who gives me the reply; He ever tells the same soft tale Of passion and of constancy To his mate, who rapt and fond. Listening sits, a bough beyond.
Страница 4 - ... his writings, is one of perennial excellence; rare in all times and situations, and perhaps nowhere and in no time more rare than in literary Europe, at this era. We see in this man a high, self-subsistent, original, and, in many respects, even great character. He shows himself a man of wonderful gifts, and with, perhaps, a still happier combination and adjustment of these : in whom Philosophy and Poetry are not only reconciled; but blended together into a purer essence, into Religion...
Страница 199 - Man is certainly stark mad; he cannot make a flea, and yet he will be making gods by dozens. Hear what Trismegistus says in praise of our sufficiency: "Of all the wonderful things, it surmounts all wonder, that man could find out the divine nature and make it.
Страница 413 - I cumber you, good Margaret, much, but I would be sorry if it should be any longer than to-morrow, for it is St. Thomas' even and the Utas* of St. Peter; and therefore to-morrow long I to go to God. It were a day very meet and convenient for me.
Страница 161 - ... judge is so clear and open as to declare against that impious vulgar opinion that the devil himself has power to torment and kill innocent children, or that he is pleased to divert himself with the good people's cheese, butter, pigs and geese, and the like errors of the ignorant and foolish rabble, the countrymen (the triers) cry, this judge hath no religion, for he doth not believe witches ; and so, to show they have some, hang the poor wretches.
Страница 189 - ... who rightly understands himself will never mistake another man's work for his own, but will love and improve himself above all other things, will refuse superfluous employments, and reject all unprofitable thoughts and propositions.
Страница 138 - Enter : its grandeur overwhelms thee not ; And why ? It is not lessened ; but thy mind, Expanded by the genius of the spot, Has grown colossal...
Страница 116 - ... thumbs on the pit of the stomach and the other fingers below the ribs. Then you will descend slowly along the body as far as the knees, or better, and, if you can without incommoding yourself, to the extremity of the feet.