The London Quarterly Review, Volumes 69-70Theodore Foster, 1842 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 2
... tion , though put into the mouth of the com- mon railer Thersites . * would often speak his deepest truths in his lightest moods . And by another and a graver poetical moralist , Obedience has been personified in the groom of the ...
... tion , though put into the mouth of the com- mon railer Thersites . * would often speak his deepest truths in his lightest moods . And by another and a graver poetical moralist , Obedience has been personified in the groom of the ...
Page 9
... tion throughout , and observe especially the use of duplicate , triplicate , and even quadru- plicate consonants in our language , how admirably they may be made to serve the purposes of rhythmical melody which they are often supposed ...
... tion throughout , and observe especially the use of duplicate , triplicate , and even quadru- plicate consonants in our language , how admirably they may be made to serve the purposes of rhythmical melody which they are often supposed ...
Page 21
... tion is concerned the inference is just . But it may be a question whether the general sense of restraint be not affected by important relax- ations of the law as regards particular crimes , and whether some portion of the 25 per cent ...
... tion is concerned the inference is just . But it may be a question whether the general sense of restraint be not affected by important relax- ations of the law as regards particular crimes , and whether some portion of the 25 per cent ...
Page 23
... tion , it is as false a humility , as it is a false - that is , for crime , as distinguished both from humanity and a false piety , for man to refuse guilt and from sin . This limitation is admit- to be the instrument . ted by Mr ...
... tion , it is as false a humility , as it is a false - that is , for crime , as distinguished both from humanity and a false piety , for man to refuse guilt and from sin . This limitation is admit- to be the instrument . ted by Mr ...
Page 33
... tion was truly pitiable . He was anxious to con- Egyptian ; but they appear to us to be vast- vert unproductive property into money , but was afraid to do so , and said that I was a stranger , ly superior to anything which India or Chi ...
... tion was truly pitiable . He was anxious to con- Egyptian ; but they appear to us to be vast- vert unproductive property into money , but was afraid to do so , and said that I was a stranger , ly superior to anything which India or Chi ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
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