Eclectic Magazine: Foreign Literature, Volumen54;Volumen117Leavitt, Throw and Company, 1891 |
Dentro del libro
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Página 18
... humanity - those questions that furnish the first impulse and the high- est purpose to all human inquiries . So long as the Egyptian is a mere mummy to us , the Babylonian a mere image in stone , the Jew a prophet , the Hindu a dreamer ...
... humanity - those questions that furnish the first impulse and the high- est purpose to all human inquiries . So long as the Egyptian is a mere mummy to us , the Babylonian a mere image in stone , the Jew a prophet , the Hindu a dreamer ...
Página 20
... human sympathy will flash from one end to the other . The most remote antiquity will cease to be re- mote . It will be brought near to us , home to us , close to our very heart . We shall be the ancients of the world , and the distant ...
... human sympathy will flash from one end to the other . The most remote antiquity will cease to be re- mote . It will be brought near to us , home to us , close to our very heart . We shall be the ancients of the world , and the distant ...
Página 87
... human eyes . You need a magnifying glass to see its fullest beauty , but the strongest lens will bring you no nearer to the true artist's limitations . In other cases the French advocates take palpable dabs , all of one shape and size ...
... human eyes . You need a magnifying glass to see its fullest beauty , but the strongest lens will bring you no nearer to the true artist's limitations . In other cases the French advocates take palpable dabs , all of one shape and size ...
Página 89
... human etymology as the verbiage surrounding it is above mere human grammar . Still I will not deny that the growing complexities of so- ciety may render it almost imperative that some words should grow into a signifi- cance both wider ...
... human etymology as the verbiage surrounding it is above mere human grammar . Still I will not deny that the growing complexities of so- ciety may render it almost imperative that some words should grow into a signifi- cance both wider ...
Página 103
... human experience , men had reached a con- ception of that law of nature which ex- presses the inevitable consequences of an imperfect appreciation of feminine charms . The injured goddess makes Izdubar's life a burden to him , until at ...
... human experience , men had reached a con- ception of that law of nature which ex- presses the inevitable consequences of an imperfect appreciation of feminine charms . The injured goddess makes Izdubar's life a burden to him , until at ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Eclectic Magazine: Foreign Literature, Volumen40 John Holmes Agnew,Walter Hilliard Bidwell Vista completa - 1857 |
Términos y frases comunes
Ameri American ancient April Fool artistic asked Ballybrophy beautiful become better Bishop Brocton called century character course critic cultivated dream dust dust-particles England English Euphrates existence eyes fact father feeling fish Franco-German war Frédéric Mistral French friends Gibbs give Grimm's Law Guanches hand Hasisadra's heart honor human influence interest Jenny Lind Kafir klephts lady land language Laurence Oliphant less light literary literature living look Lord Lord Beaconsfield luck Martingale matter means ment mind miocene moral Mount Kennedy natural talent ness never night Oliphant once Oostrum opinion pass perhaps person Philistine position possess present race Russian Samela Sanskrit seemed self-respect sense soldiers soul speak spirit story success tain tell things thought tion wife woman women words young Zulu