The Edinburgh Review: Or Critical Journal, Volume 71A. Constable, 1840 |
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Page 17
... feeling , exerts itself in acts entitling him to our unmixed approbation and es- teem . He had another opportunity of showing the friendliness of his disposition , and his congenial admiration of superior merit , as well in arms as in ...
... feeling , exerts itself in acts entitling him to our unmixed approbation and es- teem . He had another opportunity of showing the friendliness of his disposition , and his congenial admiration of superior merit , as well in arms as in ...
Page 24
... feeling towards him is certain ; and it is also , we fear , true that his career had not been such as to manifest a steady adherence to any high principles of morality . But that the rumours alluded to did him wrong seems unquestionable ...
... feeling towards him is certain ; and it is also , we fear , true that his career had not been such as to manifest a steady adherence to any high principles of morality . But that the rumours alluded to did him wrong seems unquestionable ...
Page 38
... feeling , and to fill the mind with deep dislike of its Machiavel- lian author . We are , however , strongly inclined to think that it does not refer to the Earl's execution ; but merely to the pro- priety of reducing him to a condition ...
... feeling , and to fill the mind with deep dislike of its Machiavel- lian author . We are , however , strongly inclined to think that it does not refer to the Earl's execution ; but merely to the pro- priety of reducing him to a condition ...
Page 44
... feeling entertained towards him , and which never without strong cause takes place of the esteem universally entertained for genius and valour . But be the cause what it may , the fact is unquestionable ; and indeed we find his friend ...
... feeling entertained towards him , and which never without strong cause takes place of the esteem universally entertained for genius and valour . But be the cause what it may , the fact is unquestionable ; and indeed we find his friend ...
Page 50
... feeling and tenderness of heart , joined with much worldly wisdom and calculating prudence ; the one exemplified , in his agonizing emotions on taking leave of his wife ; the other , in his recommendation to her to marry again , but not ...
... feeling and tenderness of heart , joined with much worldly wisdom and calculating prudence ; the one exemplified , in his agonizing emotions on taking leave of his wife ; the other , in his recommendation to her to marry again , but not ...
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Page 600 - ENCYCLOPEDIA OF PLANTS; Including all the Plants which are now found in, or have been introduced into, Great Britain; giving their Natural History, accompanied by such descriptions, engraved figures, and elementary details, as may enable a beginner, who is a mere English reader, to discover name of every Plant which he may find in flower, and acquire all the information respecting it which is useful and interesting.
Page 610 - The Family Shakspeare ; in which nothing is added to the Original Text ; but those words and expressions are omitted which cannot with propriety be read aloud.
Page 400 - The form is mechanic, when on any given material we impress a predetermined form, not necessarily arising out of the properties of the material ; as when to a mass of wet clay we give whatever shape we wish it to retain when hardened. The organic form, on the other hand, is innate: it shapes, as it develops, itself from within, and the fullness of its development is one and the same with the perfection of its outward form.
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Page 604 - Intended as a Source of Easy Reference for Clergymen, and for Families residing at a Distance from Professional Assistance.
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