The North American Review, Volume 41Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge O. Everett, 1835 - 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 409
... nature , can see nothing in- spiring in its beauty , it will be of little service for him to keep looking on in the hope of enjoying it more . If any one , however , should ask the same question before reading it , there would be some ...
... nature , can see nothing in- spiring in its beauty , it will be of little service for him to keep looking on in the hope of enjoying it more . If any one , however , should ask the same question before reading it , there would be some ...
Page 413
... nature belongs to the human heart . Uncultivated men , who have no system to guide them , are often attentive and ... nature . And how can it be otherwise ? There is an expres- sion in the face of nature , that can be seen by every eye ...
... nature belongs to the human heart . Uncultivated men , who have no system to guide them , are often attentive and ... nature . And how can it be otherwise ? There is an expres- sion in the face of nature , that can be seen by every eye ...
Page 414
... nature is before his mind ; and there can be no doubt that the love of nature is one of the chief elements of that love of country which , in numberless memorable examples , has shewn itself able to bid defiance to the grave . We have ...
... nature is before his mind ; and there can be no doubt that the love of nature is one of the chief elements of that love of country which , in numberless memorable examples , has shewn itself able to bid defiance to the grave . We have ...
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