Blackwood's Magazine, Volume 47W. Blackwood, 1840 - England |
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Page 54
... tion ; and when I have felt that my taste has been improved , I have ever been thankful to you , to whom I owe that source of enjoyment . " Man- ners makyth man , " was the college motto . There was the precept , in you we found the ...
... tion ; and when I have felt that my taste has been improved , I have ever been thankful to you , to whom I owe that source of enjoyment . " Man- ners makyth man , " was the college motto . There was the precept , in you we found the ...
Page 63
... tion of the moral dignity of an ass , than Wordsworth . That particular speci- men of the breed who figures at this moment before us , deserves to be commented upon in nothing less than " whole volumes in folio , " had we but leisure to ...
... tion of the moral dignity of an ass , than Wordsworth . That particular speci- men of the breed who figures at this moment before us , deserves to be commented upon in nothing less than " whole volumes in folio , " had we but leisure to ...
Page 73
... tion which the Roman see obtained in the middle ages , so very different from what had been conceded to it in the Church of the empire , is not so much to be traced to the ambition of its Gregories , or to any concerted scheme , as to ...
... tion which the Roman see obtained in the middle ages , so very different from what had been conceded to it in the Church of the empire , is not so much to be traced to the ambition of its Gregories , or to any concerted scheme , as to ...
Page 78
... tion of which , even with the most sincere intention , a change of manners so easily outruns the change of heart . As an artifice of ambition , it is not easy to understand why Becket should have practised these painful austeri- ties ...
... tion of which , even with the most sincere intention , a change of manners so easily outruns the change of heart . As an artifice of ambition , it is not easy to understand why Becket should have practised these painful austeri- ties ...
Page 91
... tion and morality , the distinction of man is asserted in his relation to the perfect or infinite , the relatio inter divos . By the last , his separation or outness from that is sustained . By the one , the spirit of man goeth up ...
... tion and morality , the distinction of man is asserted in his relation to the perfect or infinite , the relatio inter divos . By the last , his separation or outness from that is sustained . By the one , the spirit of man goeth up ...
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Common terms and phrases
amongst Angela appear Battle of Prague Beatrice beauty breeches British called Casuistry character Christian Church colour connexion Cosm Count dark dear Deerbrook delight Don Juan Don Luis Don Manuel door earth enquired enter Essenes Eusebius eyes father Faust feel feudal Gammon give Goethe Goth Gothic Greek Grimm's law hair hand head hear heart Heaven Herat honour hour human Josephus lady language light look Lord matter means ment mind Miss Tag-rag mouse nature never nexion night o'er once passion peace Persia present reader rhyme round scene seemed sion soon soul spirit Squallop stand Teutonic languages thee thing thou thought tion Titian Titmouse Titmouse's translation truth turned uncon Venetian voice whole Wolfgang Menzel words