The British Quarterly Review, Том 75Hodder and Stoughton, 1882 |
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... each other , and without means of frequent communication , rejoiced when they could meet at long intervals , congratulate each other on the great future they were preparing for the world , and , after 2 Literary Clubs of Paris .
... each other , and without means of frequent communication , rejoiced when they could meet at long intervals , congratulate each other on the great future they were preparing for the world , and , after 2 Literary Clubs of Paris .
Страница 10
... means that our good Nicolas had no sympathy with a muse who had so little feeling for the dig- nity of verse , and thought more of matter than of form , a realistic muse to whom truth was everything . In fact , Saint Amant , who had ...
... means that our good Nicolas had no sympathy with a muse who had so little feeling for the dig- nity of verse , and thought more of matter than of form , a realistic muse to whom truth was everything . In fact , Saint Amant , who had ...
Страница 22
... means of mending them , and all with the ardour and interest natural to a society which feels itself honoured by the success of its members . ' An Arcadia , truly ! A return to the Golden Age . He goes on to tell of the famous readings ...
... means of mending them , and all with the ardour and interest natural to a society which feels itself honoured by the success of its members . ' An Arcadia , truly ! A return to the Golden Age . He goes on to tell of the famous readings ...
Страница 23
... means toothless , became blind : Bernard went mad ; Colardeau and Le Mierre died : and so , by slow degrees , the second Careau dwindled away , until the dinners came to an end because there were no more members left . The Dominicales ...
... means toothless , became blind : Bernard went mad ; Colardeau and Le Mierre died : and so , by slow degrees , the second Careau dwindled away , until the dinners came to an end because there were no more members left . The Dominicales ...
Страница 34
... means nothing -never was meant to mean anything ! What if in truth we receive but what we give , and in our life alone doth Nature live ! What if the language of metaphysics as well as of poetry be drawn , not from Nature at all , but ...
... means nothing -never was meant to mean anything ! What if in truth we receive but what we give , and in our life alone doth Nature live ! What if the language of metaphysics as well as of poetry be drawn , not from Nature at all , but ...
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Страница 39 - I am myself indifferent honest, but yet I could accuse me of such things that it were better my mother had not borne me. I am very proud, revengeful, ambitious, with more offences at my beck than I have thoughts to put them in, imagination to give them shape, or time to act them in. What should such fellows as I do crawling between heaven and earth ? We are arrant knaves all; believe none of us.
Страница 338 - The trivial round, the common task, Will furnish all we ought to ask; Room to deny ourselves; a road To bring us daily nearer God.
Страница 328 - ... else, by and through which their action and force may be conveyed from one to another, is to me so great an absurdity that I believe no man, who has in philosophical matters a competent faculty of thinking, can ever fall into it. Gravity must be caused by an agent acting constantly according to certain laws ; but whether this agent be material or immaterial, I have left to the consideration of my readers" (3d letter to Bentley, 5th February 1692-93).
Страница 249 - The Encyclopaedic Dictionary. A New and Original Work of Reference to all the Words in the English Language, with a Full Account of their Origin, Meaning, Pronunciation, and Use.
Страница 363 - We never could be of the mind that violence was suited to the advancing of true religion; nor do we intend that our authority shall ever be a tool to the irregular passions of any party. Moderation is what religion enjoins, what neighbouring Churches expect from you, and what we recommend to you.
Страница 154 - It was in Rousseau that polite Europe first hearkened to strange voices and faint reverberation from out of the vague and cavernous shadow in which the common people move.
Страница 209 - Upon this, Mrs. Procter, cutting in, delivered — (it is her own story) — a neat oration on the life and •writings of Carlyle, and enlightened him in her happiest and airiest manner ; all of which he heard, staring in the dreariest silence, and then said (indignantly as before),
Страница 303 - ... the dynamical force disengaged, directly or indirectly, by the act, than the pull of a hair-trigger in comparison with the force of the mine which it explodes. But without the power to make some material disposition, to originate some movement, or to change, at least temporarily, the amount of dynamical force appropriate to some one or more material molecules, the mechanical results of human or animal volition are inconceivable.1 It matters not that we are ignorant of the mode in which this is...
Страница 239 - ... he is simply the Divine flower of humanity, blossoming after ages of spiritual growth, — the realised possibility of life in God. And if he is this, he has no consciously exceptional part to play, but only to be what he is, to follow the momentary love, to do and say what the hour may bring, to be quiet under the sorrows which pity and purity...
Страница 340 - ... day. If so great devotion was then used, and such remembrance of the praise of God before the ark of the covenant, how great ought to be the reverence and devotion which I and all Christian people should have in the presence of this sacrament, in the receiving of the...