Blackwood's Magazine, Band 46W. Blackwood., 1839 |
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Seite 5
... turn of mind , approach- ing to the savage , he has occasionally thrown a force and vivacity , derived from his own character , into those mythological terrors which he borrow- ed from antiquity , of which , at first sight , such ...
... turn of mind , approach- ing to the savage , he has occasionally thrown a force and vivacity , derived from his own character , into those mythological terrors which he borrow- ed from antiquity , of which , at first sight , such ...
Seite 12
... turn- ing his experience to account , and of making the life of a poet the subject of a drama , composed half in the spirit of comedy , half in earnestness . Rey- nolds , in treating the same subject , has made it merely farcical ...
... turn- ing his experience to account , and of making the life of a poet the subject of a drama , composed half in the spirit of comedy , half in earnestness . Rey- nolds , in treating the same subject , has made it merely farcical ...
Seite 13
... turn for poetry . In youth , he com . posed Latin poems , and Greek verses " equal to those of Homer ; " for in fact they were borrowed from him . At a more advanced age , he tried trage- dy : with what success , the epigrams of Racine ...
... turn for poetry . In youth , he com . posed Latin poems , and Greek verses " equal to those of Homer ; " for in fact they were borrowed from him . At a more advanced age , he tried trage- dy : with what success , the epigrams of Racine ...
Seite 14
... turn borrow that more reasoning and phi- losophizing character which distin- guishes the works of Hume , Robert- son , and Gibbon , from their predeces sors . Voltaire cannot certainly be considered a great historian : he want- ed ...
... turn borrow that more reasoning and phi- losophizing character which distin- guishes the works of Hume , Robert- son , and Gibbon , from their predeces sors . Voltaire cannot certainly be considered a great historian : he want- ed ...
Seite 15
... turning of the tide in philoso phy , from materialism towards ideal ism , becomes first visible in Condillac , in his ... turn of the language harmonious . Sometimes we find nobleness where passion ; often coldness - never eloquence ...
... turning of the tide in philoso phy , from materialism towards ideal ism , becomes first visible in Condillac , in his ... turn of the language harmonious . Sometimes we find nobleness where passion ; often coldness - never eloquence ...
Inhalt
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100 | |
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256 | |
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345 | |
368 | |
431 | |
614 | |
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658 | |
669 | |
677 | |
689 | |
715 | |
733 | |
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767 | |
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781 | |
801 | |
815 | |
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858 | |
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admiration Antonio appear Ataman Auchterarder beauty called character Chartist Church colour Cossacks Court Court of Session Crescentia cried dear death Dniepr Egypt empire England eyes father favour feel France French Gammon genius give Government Grattan hand head heard heart heaven Henry Grattan honour hope Huckaback human Ireland King labour less light Lincoln's Inn look Lord Lord John Russell matter means ment mind miracle nature never night noble o'er object once Pacha Parliament party pass passion person picture Pietro d'Abano poet poetical poetry political Porte possession present priest principle Quirk racter Russia scene seems Shakspeare side sion song soul spirit style Syria taste thee thing thou thought tion Titmouse true turn Ukraine verse Voltaire Whig whole words young youth