The London Quarterly Review, Volumes 69-70Theodore Foster, 1842 |
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Page 1
... mind , and ed , so as to be borne in upon the mind with having correlations with every other part ; the weight of one stream , was more for the and whether it be from the unity of spirit interests of the subject than that pointed and ...
... mind , and ed , so as to be borne in upon the mind with having correlations with every other part ; the weight of one stream , was more for the and whether it be from the unity of spirit interests of the subject than that pointed and ...
Page 2
... mind which had been diffused widely with an easy fluctuation through the Excursion , though not changing its nature and spirit , was to take a different structure - was to be inspis- sated , as it were , and form itself into crystals in ...
... mind which had been diffused widely with an easy fluctuation through the Excursion , though not changing its nature and spirit , was to take a different structure - was to be inspis- sated , as it were , and form itself into crystals in ...
Page 4
... mind of a great Prince Arthur- man lives with him from that time forth , mix- es itself with his thoughts in all moods of his mind , reproduces itself in many combinations , passes from him in sundry shapes , and , accor- ding as his own ...
... mind of a great Prince Arthur- man lives with him from that time forth , mix- es itself with his thoughts in all moods of his mind , reproduces itself in many combinations , passes from him in sundry shapes , and , accor- ding as his own ...
Page 6
... mind , a life of think- ing for thinking's sake , led by the infirmities of his constitution to turn away from realities , เ And haply by abstruse research to steal From his own nature all the natural man ' . Coleridge's Ode to ...
... mind , a life of think- ing for thinking's sake , led by the infirmities of his constitution to turn away from realities , เ And haply by abstruse research to steal From his own nature all the natural man ' . Coleridge's Ode to ...
Page 7
... mind Of course we do not mean to say that , for for subjects ; he goes forth into the world , the purposes of a writer , there must not be and they present themselves . His mind much thinking which neither begins nor lies open to nature ...
... mind Of course we do not mean to say that , for for subjects ; he goes forth into the world , the purposes of a writer , there must not be and they present themselves . His mind much thinking which neither begins nor lies open to nature ...
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ammonia ancient animal appear arch architecture beautiful bile Bishop Bishop of Beauvais blood body called carbonic acid carnivora cause character Chouans Christian Church Church of England Church of Rome contain death divine doubt effect Encyclopædia England English faith favour feeling feet fibrine fish flowers France garden give Gothic Gothic architecture Grecian Greece hand holy honour interest Joan King labour less living Lord matter ment mind Miss Burney moral natural never nitrogen object observed oxygen Palenque peculiar perhaps persons plants poet pope Popery present principle produced proteine racter readers Reformation remarkable Rienzi Roman Rome ruins says seems side sion sonnet spirit style substance Temple things thought tion truth ture urea uric acid vegetable whole words young