The New-York Review, and Atheneum Magazine, Volumes 1-2E. Bliss & E. White, 1825 |
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Page 3
... language ; nor is his Paradise Regained unworthy to be the last work of so great a man . His Samson Agonistes , full of grand sentiments and strains of high philosophy , seems to owe its want of dramatic interest , not to any inherent ...
... language ; nor is his Paradise Regained unworthy to be the last work of so great a man . His Samson Agonistes , full of grand sentiments and strains of high philosophy , seems to owe its want of dramatic interest , not to any inherent ...
Page 30
... language too unmeasured , when combating the presumption which would seat itself in the throne of the universe , and scan the laws and destinies of creation . Probably without differing many hairs breadth from the temperate views of our ...
... language too unmeasured , when combating the presumption which would seat itself in the throne of the universe , and scan the laws and destinies of creation . Probably without differing many hairs breadth from the temperate views of our ...
Page 33
... language , and that state of feeling which we may judge to have been habitual to the writer whenever his mind was turned , either in direct meditation , or by some casual associa- tion , to the recollection of the " deep things of God ...
... language , and that state of feeling which we may judge to have been habitual to the writer whenever his mind was turned , either in direct meditation , or by some casual associa- tion , to the recollection of the " deep things of God ...
Page 34
... language , and brought them down to the ordinary conceptions of life , so as to leave no obstacles in the way of their attainment , but such as are inherent in their own nature . The topics of general knowledge have been presented to ...
... language , and brought them down to the ordinary conceptions of life , so as to leave no obstacles in the way of their attainment , but such as are inherent in their own nature . The topics of general knowledge have been presented to ...
Page 48
... language , which are to be found so frequently in the pages of this work . The author , in his preface , has so contumaciously disclaimed all critical ju- risdiction , that we fear it would be of little benefit to him , as it certainly ...
... language , which are to be found so frequently in the pages of this work . The author , in his preface , has so contumaciously disclaimed all critical ju- risdiction , that we fear it would be of little benefit to him , as it certainly ...
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