Essays and Reviews, Том 1Ticknor and Fields, 1878 |
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Страница 10
... ness , it has led to success in other professions . The Edinburgh Review , which took the lead in the establish ment of the new order of things , was projected in a lofty attic by two briefless barristers and a titheless parson ; the ...
... ness , it has led to success in other professions . The Edinburgh Review , which took the lead in the establish ment of the new order of things , was projected in a lofty attic by two briefless barristers and a titheless parson ; the ...
Страница 19
... ness ? " In considering the lives of men of lofty endow- ments , we are often better pleased with the charity that covers a multitude of sins , than the stern justice which parades them in the light , and holds them up to abhor- rence ...
... ness ? " In considering the lives of men of lofty endow- ments , we are often better pleased with the charity that covers a multitude of sins , than the stern justice which parades them in the light , and holds them up to abhor- rence ...
Страница 33
... ness , and append correct dates to their forgotten effusions , is an exercise of philanthropy which is likely to be little appreciated ; anl yet , in many instances , it was neces- sary , in order to give a fair reflection of the ...
... ness , and append correct dates to their forgotten effusions , is an exercise of philanthropy which is likely to be little appreciated ; anl yet , in many instances , it was neces- sary , in order to give a fair reflection of the ...
Страница 36
... ness to express pity or contempt for the poetry of the United States . But it is one of the amiable peculiarities of John Bull to forget all his own past and present sins , in his zeal against the peccadilloes of his neighbors . - All ...
... ness to express pity or contempt for the poetry of the United States . But it is one of the amiable peculiarities of John Bull to forget all his own past and present sins , in his zeal against the peccadilloes of his neighbors . - All ...
Страница 47
... ness and truth , and is prodigal of elegant imbecilities and insipid refinements ; whilst the other pampers the taste of the vulgar with recitals of misery and crime , exhibits all the forms of melodramatic agony , and fills the page ...
... ness and truth , and is prodigal of elegant imbecilities and insipid refinements ; whilst the other pampers the taste of the vulgar with recitals of misery and crime , exhibits all the forms of melodramatic agony , and fills the page ...
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