The Quarterly Review, Band 72J. Murray, 1843 |
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Seite 40
... human heart we find a feeling of instinctive restraint paramount to the desire for disclosure - a dislike to publicity superior to the longing for sympathy . 6 Res est , crede mihi , timida semper Amor . ' Even in that strongest of all ...
... human heart we find a feeling of instinctive restraint paramount to the desire for disclosure - a dislike to publicity superior to the longing for sympathy . 6 Res est , crede mihi , timida semper Amor . ' Even in that strongest of all ...
Seite 46
... human heart , and love for the human race ( both unattain- able without the grace of true Christianity ) , are perhaps the least likely to undertake it . True indeed is the parallel between an Evangelical of the present and a Puritan of ...
... human heart , and love for the human race ( both unattain- able without the grace of true Christianity ) , are perhaps the least likely to undertake it . True indeed is the parallel between an Evangelical of the present and a Puritan of ...
Seite 149
... humanity , he appears to us to recede from the province of the highest imaginative art . The wings of angels , what are they but labels to denote that the human shape to which they are appended is to be deemed and taken to be superhuman ...
... humanity , he appears to us to recede from the province of the highest imaginative art . The wings of angels , what are they but labels to denote that the human shape to which they are appended is to be deemed and taken to be superhuman ...
Inhalt
The Lady of the Manor Being a Series of Conversations | 25 |
Peregrine Bunce By the Author of Sayings | 53 |
25 | 72 |
Urheberrecht | |
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