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. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 59
Page 338
... soul , it increases capacity by awakening thought . It appeals to the deepest and most intense interests of man ; it speaks of his eternal nature , his powers , prospects , hopes and destinies . Such knowledge , also , gives the proper ...
... soul , it increases capacity by awakening thought . It appeals to the deepest and most intense interests of man ; it speaks of his eternal nature , his powers , prospects , hopes and destinies . Such knowledge , also , gives the proper ...
Page 398
... soul , con- stitute its essence , and are intended for endless expansion . These are the chief distinctions of our nature ; they constitute our hu- manity . To unfold these , is the great work of our being . The Light in which these ...
... soul , con- stitute its essence , and are intended for endless expansion . These are the chief distinctions of our nature ; they constitute our hu- manity . To unfold these , is the great work of our being . The Light in which these ...
Page 400
... soul to Matter , which turns it to the Outward , as to something nobler than itself . I fear , the spirit of science , at the present day , is too often a degradation , rather than the true culture of the soul . It is the bowing down of ...
... soul to Matter , which turns it to the Outward , as to something nobler than itself . I fear , the spirit of science , at the present day , is too often a degradation , rather than the true culture of the soul . It is the bowing down of ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
American ancient appears Ariosto Ashmun Audubon beautiful bird Boston called Carey Channing character Châteaubriand Christian church Cicero course cultivated delight England English Europe excitement existence favor feeling France friends genius give Greece happiness heart heaven honor horse human hundred important influence intellectual interest Italy Julius Cæsar labor land light living look Machiavelli Madame de Stael manner means ment mind moral nations nature never NICCOLÒ MACHIAVELLI passed passion peculiar perhaps person Philadelphia philosophical poet poetry political present principles pursuit readers religion remarks respect Rome scene seems shew Sir James Mackintosh slavery slaves society soul spirit spontoon talent taste Teufelsdroeckh thee things thou thought tion traveller truth universal suffrage Voltaire Washington Irving whole William Roscoe writer York young