The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 4Atlantic Monthly Company, 1859 - American essays |
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Page 14
... -for I do not believe that independence would have been declared , had it not been for the effect of that work , -they are not capable of judging of the whole of the ser- vices of Thomas Paine . If my memorial was referred to the ...
... -for I do not believe that independence would have been declared , had it not been for the effect of that work , -they are not capable of judging of the whole of the ser- vices of Thomas Paine . If my memorial was referred to the ...
Page 15
Died January 8 , 1809 , ' and , having lifted up several of the bones , replaced the whole and passed them . They have since been forwarded from this town to London . " " At a public dinner given to Cobbett in Liverpool , Paine was ...
Died January 8 , 1809 , ' and , having lifted up several of the bones , replaced the whole and passed them . They have since been forwarded from this town to London . " " At a public dinner given to Cobbett in Liverpool , Paine was ...
Page 23
... nay , and what is more to be dreaded , turn poet , which is said to be a disease So down went absolutely incurable . ” 66 " the longer poems " of Diana de Monte- mayor , the whole of Salmantino , with the Iberian Shepherd and ...
... nay , and what is more to be dreaded , turn poet , which is said to be a disease So down went absolutely incurable . ” 66 " the longer poems " of Diana de Monte- mayor , the whole of Salmantino , with the Iberian Shepherd and ...
Page 24
Why should not I content myself with so many great examples of deep divines , profound casuists , grave philosophers , who have written , not letters only , but whole tomes and voluminous treatises about nothing ?
Why should not I content myself with so many great examples of deep divines , profound casuists , grave philosophers , who have written , not letters only , but whole tomes and voluminous treatises about nothing ?
Page 37
... the whole having been ig- nited by the lightning . There is nothing in Nature more strik- ing to the novice than the first sugges- tions of the various , and apparently con- tradictory , at least unexpected , positions in which the ...
... the whole having been ig- nited by the lightning . There is nothing in Nature more strik- ing to the novice than the first sugges- tions of the various , and apparently con- tradictory , at least unexpected , positions in which the ...
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