The North American Review, Volume 88Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge O. Everett, 1859 - American fiction Vols. 227-230, no. 2 include: Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
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Page 86
... took a conspicuous part in the de- bates on the Irish Trade Bills , of which he was the most active and powerful supporter , though his constituents in Bristol were strongly opposed to them , and several of his prin- cipal friends wrote ...
... took a conspicuous part in the de- bates on the Irish Trade Bills , of which he was the most active and powerful supporter , though his constituents in Bristol were strongly opposed to them , and several of his prin- cipal friends wrote ...
Page 152
... took the place of his former anxiety . The influences of nature in that lonely region helped to make him sad and thoughtful . He felt profoundly that sense of desolation which Chateaubriand has described in his romantic memoirs . His ...
... took the place of his former anxiety . The influences of nature in that lonely region helped to make him sad and thoughtful . He felt profoundly that sense of desolation which Chateaubriand has described in his romantic memoirs . His ...
Page 513
... took the hint , and , as long afterward as he stayed in Prussia , dressed in plain German fashion . Frederick William can scarcely be called a warlike sov- ereign ; and although he took such pains to strengthen and perfect his army , he ...
... took the hint , and , as long afterward as he stayed in Prussia , dressed in plain German fashion . Frederick William can scarcely be called a warlike sov- ereign ; and although he took such pains to strengthen and perfect his army , he ...
Contents
THE MOUNT VERNON MEMORIAL | 52 |
EDMUND BURKE | 61 |
LIFE AND WRITINGS OF DE QUINCEY | 113 |
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