The Eclectic Magazine: Foreign Literature, Tom 96Leavitt, Trow & Company, 1881 |
Z wnętrza książki
Wyniki 1 - 5 z 71
Strona 4
... ence , that its value can be determined . Discussion , therefore , is one of the mo- tive powers of life , and , as such , is not to be deprecated . Still one can hardly look without despair on the passions ex- cited , and the energies ...
... ence , that its value can be determined . Discussion , therefore , is one of the mo- tive powers of life , and , as such , is not to be deprecated . Still one can hardly look without despair on the passions ex- cited , and the energies ...
Strona 13
... ence . The Puritan attempt was a grand experiment . It had to be made . Sooner or later the question must have forced itself upon earnest believers pos- sessed of power . Is it not possible to rule the world in accordance with the ...
... ence . The Puritan attempt was a grand experiment . It had to be made . Sooner or later the question must have forced itself upon earnest believers pos- sessed of power . Is it not possible to rule the world in accordance with the ...
Strona 14
... ence of natural dignity . This is the mordant which fixes the religious dye . He who is capable of feeling the finer glow of religion would possess a substra- tum available for all the relations of life , even if his religion were taken ...
... ence of natural dignity . This is the mordant which fixes the religious dye . He who is capable of feeling the finer glow of religion would possess a substra- tum available for all the relations of life , even if his religion were taken ...
Strona 41
... ence could ever be gained . The ques- tions raised when a young Dipper , which had never before even seen water , dives and swims with perfect ease , are questions which the theory of organized experience does not even tend to solve ...
... ence could ever be gained . The ques- tions raised when a young Dipper , which had never before even seen water , dives and swims with perfect ease , are questions which the theory of organized experience does not even tend to solve ...
Strona 42
... ence of injury had arisen . This terror prompted it to the proper methods of escape , and the knowledge how to use its faculties for this object was as intui- tive as the apparatus for effecting it was hereditary . In this sense the ...
... ence of injury had arisen . This terror prompted it to the proper methods of escape , and the knowledge how to use its faculties for this object was as intui- tive as the apparatus for effecting it was hereditary . In this sense the ...
Inne wydania - Wyświetl wszystko
Kluczowe wyrazy i wyrażenia
Adam Bede Aglionby animals Anna Seward appear balloon beauty believe better brain called character Conisbrough death doubt dream dress effect ence England English Eocene existence eyes fact father feel feet fish force friends genius George Eliot Gilyak give gneiss ground Guaranda hand heard heart human idea interest kind lady land less light Liszt living look Lord means ment Middlemarch miles mind Miocene moral nature ness never night observed once Ophelia passed perhaps person Pliocene poet political present question remarkable Sainte-Beuve Samoyedes San Marino Scenes of Clerical seems seen selenium sensation sense Siberia sion sleep society soul spirit story Suwarrow things thou thought tion told town true truth turn Ussuri whole women words writes young