North-American Review and Miscellaneous Journal, 4. ciltJared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge University of Northern Iowa, 1965 Vols. 277-230, no. 2 include Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
Kitabın içinden
63 sonuçtan 1-3 arası sonuçlar
Sayfa 133
... tion of Seezen's collections and papers . Interesting as they must have been , they are irrecoverably dispersed and de- stroyed . The person who transmitted Mr. Buckingham's letter to Mr. Von Hammer , who subscribes himself Hadi Ibrahim ...
... tion of Seezen's collections and papers . Interesting as they must have been , they are irrecoverably dispersed and de- stroyed . The person who transmitted Mr. Buckingham's letter to Mr. Von Hammer , who subscribes himself Hadi Ibrahim ...
Sayfa 217
... tion . We have heard it thus explained by intelligent Germans : Of the early events of life , we can have but an indistinct and uncertain remembrance ; nor do we , as Go- the himself says , always know what we have received from the ...
... tion . We have heard it thus explained by intelligent Germans : Of the early events of life , we can have but an indistinct and uncertain remembrance ; nor do we , as Go- the himself says , always know what we have received from the ...
Sayfa 272
... tion about them , have never , for a moment , escaped from their direction and use . The navigation of the sea and the cultivation of the earth , the forging of metals and the fash- ioning of wood , though their origin is beyond the ...
... tion about them , have never , for a moment , escaped from their direction and use . The navigation of the sea and the cultivation of the earth , the forging of metals and the fash- ioning of wood , though their origin is beyond the ...
Diğer baskılar - Tümünü görüntüle
Sık kullanılan terimler ve kelime öbekleri
admiration amongst ancient antiquity appear Babylon Beauchamp beautiful Belus bitumen Boston bricks called cement characters classick course Don Paul earth effect eloquence England English errour Euphrates favour feeling Fort Osage French friends Garrick genius give Goethe heart Herodotus Indians inscriptions Italy labour land language learned Leo X less letters live logick Mably Major Rennel manner means ment miles mind musick nature never o'er observed octave Ogilvie opinion orator oratory passed passion perhaps Persepolis Persia philosophical Plato poem poet poetry present publick racters readers reason reeds remarks rhyme river Rostrum ruins scene seems seen semitones shew society soul sounds specimens spirit taste thee thing thou thought tion tower of Babel town truth verse vibrations Werther whole writing young