The Spirit of the Age: Or Contemporary PortraitsOxford University Press, 1954 - 302 стор. |
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Сторінка 9
... present question is whether we can , with safety and effect , be wholly emancipated from them ? Whether we should shake them off at pleasure and without mercy , as the only bar to the triumph of truth and justice ? Or whether ...
... present question is whether we can , with safety and effect , be wholly emancipated from them ? Whether we should shake them off at pleasure and without mercy , as the only bar to the triumph of truth and justice ? Or whether ...
Сторінка 39
Or Contemporary Portraits William Hazlitt. Mr. Coleridge THE present is an age of talkers , and not of doers ; and the reason is , that the world is growing old . We are so far advanced in the Arts and Sciences , that we live in ...
Or Contemporary Portraits William Hazlitt. Mr. Coleridge THE present is an age of talkers , and not of doers ; and the reason is , that the world is growing old . We are so far advanced in the Arts and Sciences , that we live in ...
Сторінка 144
... present sufficiently in request with the public to save or relieve him from the last necessity to which a man of genius can be reduced - that of becoming the God of his own idolatry ! Sir James Mackintosh THE subject of the present ...
... present sufficiently in request with the public to save or relieve him from the last necessity to which a man of genius can be reduced - that of becoming the God of his own idolatry ! Sir James Mackintosh THE subject of the present ...
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admiration affectation argument beauty Bentham breath Caleb Williams candour casuistry character Cobbett Coleridge common common-place criticism delight Edinburgh Review eloquence equally fancy favour feeling flowers French Revolution friends genius give Godwin grace ground habit hand heart honour House human idle imagination interest Irving Jeremy Bentham less liberty light living look Lord Byron Lord Eldon Lyrical Ballads Malthus mankind manner means mind modern moral Muse nature never object opinion orator pain passage passion perhaps person philosopher poem poet poetical poetry political popular prejudice pretensions principle of population question reason reform romantic Scotch sense sentiment sion Sir Francis Burdett Sir James Mackintosh Sir Walter Sir Walter Scott sort Southey speak speeches spirit spleen striking style talent thing thought tion tone Tooke truth turn understanding vanity verse Whig wild word Wordsworth writings