The North American Review, Volume 89Jared 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. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 82
Page 20
... give to any figure , say , for example , a Mercury . Now if a sculptor , working on this marble and making this Mercury , does not know how to bring it to that perfection which he has imagined , or which a better artist might have ...
... give to any figure , say , for example , a Mercury . Now if a sculptor , working on this marble and making this Mercury , does not know how to bring it to that perfection which he has imagined , or which a better artist might have ...
Page 25
... give by which I pray : My unassisted heart is barren clay , That of its native self can nothing feed . Of good and pious works Thou art the seed , That quickens only where Thou say'st it may : Unless Thou show to us thine own true way ...
... give by which I pray : My unassisted heart is barren clay , That of its native self can nothing feed . Of good and pious works Thou art the seed , That quickens only where Thou say'st it may : Unless Thou show to us thine own true way ...
Page 251
... give us the faintest idea of the use of the word , or its office as a vehicle of thought ? The fact is , that , in English , nouns stand in various modifying relations to other words , and that we class these together as objective ...
... give us the faintest idea of the use of the word , or its office as a vehicle of thought ? The fact is , that , in English , nouns stand in various modifying relations to other words , and that we class these together as objective ...
Contents
CONTEMPORARY FRENCH LITERATURE | 209 |
CHIEF JUSTICE PARSONS | 232 |
FOWLERS ENGLISH GRAMMAR | 244 |
Copyright | |
2 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
accused Æthelstan American Anglo-Saxons aquæ army artist beauty Bishop Boston British cause century character Charlemagne chivalry Christian Church Collin de Plancy command court cure death diseases Divine doubt Ducange duty edition effect England English equally Europe existence expression fact faith favor feeling force France French give hand heart Henry Hincmar honor human India influence interest Joseph de Maistre judicial judicium knight Königswarter labor land language less letters living Lord Castlereagh Lord Cornwallis Lord Cornwallis's LXXXIX means medical art medicine ment Michel Angelo mind mode moral nature never Nuremberg object Octave Feuillet ordeal period Plutarch poems political practice present principle reader reason regard relation religious result says Sir Henry Clinton sonnet soul spirit success superstition tion truth Vittoria Colonna volume whole words write York