The Museum of Foreign Literature, Science and Art, Том 21E. Littell, 1832 |
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Сторінка 3
... believe , ever accused him of ido- latrous intentions . The very ground of the charge against him is , that he had no idola- trous intentions . Nobody would have blamed him if he had really gone to Wimbledon Church , with the feelings ...
... believe , ever accused him of ido- latrous intentions . The very ground of the charge against him is , that he had no idola- trous intentions . Nobody would have blamed him if he had really gone to Wimbledon Church , with the feelings ...
Сторінка 9
... believe this ac- count to have been very near the truth . believe that the people , whose minds were made up on either side , who were inclined to make any sacrifice , or run any risk for either religion , were very few . Each side had ...
... believe this ac- count to have been very near the truth . believe that the people , whose minds were made up on either side , who were inclined to make any sacrifice , or run any risk for either religion , were very few . Each side had ...
Сторінка 18
... believe you hae seen a fish that could flee ! ' " The pleasant trade which had wafted us , with different degrees of velocity , over a dis- tance of more than a thousand miles , at last gradually failed . The first symptoms of the ap ...
... believe you hae seen a fish that could flee ! ' " The pleasant trade which had wafted us , with different degrees of velocity , over a dis- tance of more than a thousand miles , at last gradually failed . The first symptoms of the ap ...
Сторінка 24
... believe Goethe , with all his genius and learning , was " of the earth earthy " -that he took a tone from , rather than give it to his age . His countrymen desired worldly wis- dom , and he taught it better than any other man - they ...
... believe Goethe , with all his genius and learning , was " of the earth earthy " -that he took a tone from , rather than give it to his age . His countrymen desired worldly wis- dom , and he taught it better than any other man - they ...
Сторінка 34
... believe that nothing short of the most urgent remonstrances will compel her to abide by those articles of the treaty , by which alone she holds Poland . The essence and intent of those articles was the interposition of a con ...
... believe that nothing short of the most urgent remonstrances will compel her to abide by those articles of the treaty , by which alone she holds Poland . The essence and intent of those articles was the interposition of a con ...
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admiration American animal appear arms Austria beautiful birds Blackwood's Magazine Byron called character church colour Congress of Vienna Contessa Guiccioli death delight Dumont duty earth effect England English Europe eyes father favour fear feelings foreign France French genius give Grindlewald habits hand head heard heart heaven honour hope hour human imagination interest Italy Junot king labour lady less living look Lord Lord Byron Madame de Staël Major-General Amherst manner ment mind Mirabeau Napoleon nation nature never Niger night object observed once opinion party passed passions perhaps person poet Poland political possession present principle racter religion remarkable rendered Russia scarcely scene seemed seen Sir Walter Scott soon sound Spain species spirit sweet thee thing thou thought tion voice whole words writer young