North-American Review and Miscellaneous Journal, 8. ciltJared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge O. Everett, 1965 Vols. 277-230, no. 2 include Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
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39 sonuçtan 1-3 arası sonuçlar
Sayfa 280
... imagination which can group and fill out , and give the lights and shades to the scanty materials left us , with the distinctness of a picture . He must love old books even as Southey does , who says he should be miserable without them ...
... imagination which can group and fill out , and give the lights and shades to the scanty materials left us , with the distinctness of a picture . He must love old books even as Southey does , who says he should be miserable without them ...
Sayfa 440
... imagination it may be innocently indulged but Mr. Stewart has a profound and consoling remark , which may satisfy us that we shall lose nothing even in regard to richness and variety of mental prospect , by ad- hering to mere sober ...
... imagination it may be innocently indulged but Mr. Stewart has a profound and consoling remark , which may satisfy us that we shall lose nothing even in regard to richness and variety of mental prospect , by ad- hering to mere sober ...
Sayfa 445
... imagination of Chaucer , and deco- rated by the taste of Pope , is almost exclusively dedicated to the memory of the truly great . Or rather , like the Pantheon of Rome , it stands in calm and severe beauty amid the ruins of ancient ...
... imagination of Chaucer , and deco- rated by the taste of Pope , is almost exclusively dedicated to the memory of the truly great . Or rather , like the Pantheon of Rome , it stands in calm and severe beauty amid the ruins of ancient ...
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