The New-York Review, and Atheneum Magazine, Volumes 1-2E. Bliss & E. White, 1825 |
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Results 1-5 of 94
Page 1
... considered as actual human beings , subject to the common pas- sions and infirmities of our race , and , for the most part , to the ordinary influences of good and ill fortune . It cannot surely be VOL . I. 1 impious to suppose that ...
... considered as actual human beings , subject to the common pas- sions and infirmities of our race , and , for the most part , to the ordinary influences of good and ill fortune . It cannot surely be VOL . I. 1 impious to suppose that ...
Page 25
... considered adverse to warlike pursuits , those nations which have been devoted to the business of traffic and exchange , hav- ing exhibited the least inclination to encounter the collisions of war . Carthage , notwithstanding the ...
... considered adverse to warlike pursuits , those nations which have been devoted to the business of traffic and exchange , hav- ing exhibited the least inclination to encounter the collisions of war . Carthage , notwithstanding the ...
Page 31
... considered as something nobler and more divine than reason itself . They may lie dormant , in the darkness of ignorance , or the corruption of gross vice ; but , when the occasion which is to call them into energy arrives , they develop ...
... considered as something nobler and more divine than reason itself . They may lie dormant , in the darkness of ignorance , or the corruption of gross vice ; but , when the occasion which is to call them into energy arrives , they develop ...
Page 40
... considered , perhaps no book has appeared among us , and been universally read , which has given rise to a division of sentiments respecting its merits , so marked , and so easily assignable to different classes of minds . Those who ...
... considered , perhaps no book has appeared among us , and been universally read , which has given rise to a division of sentiments respecting its merits , so marked , and so easily assignable to different classes of minds . Those who ...
Page 49
... considered unfit themes for the imaginative writer , have not induced him to shrink from the battle grounds on which our freedom was born , or to pass them by as unsusceptible of the decorations , or unworthy of the gifts of genius . In ...
... considered unfit themes for the imaginative writer , have not induced him to shrink from the battle grounds on which our freedom was born , or to pass them by as unsusceptible of the decorations , or unworthy of the gifts of genius . In ...
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