The World's Best Essays: From the Earliest Period to the Present Time, Volumen2David Josiah Brewer F.P. Kaiser, 1900 |
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Página 431
... stand upon the crowning point of the hill , from which I can behold every foot of the hundred acres , and think what is going on , what gigantic powers are silently working , I feel as if all the workmanship that was stored in the ...
... stand upon the crowning point of the hill , from which I can behold every foot of the hundred acres , and think what is going on , what gigantic powers are silently working , I feel as if all the workmanship that was stored in the ...
Página 433
... stand unabashed , and not ashamed , in the very royalty of heaven . Only vulgar natures employ their superiority to ... standing up and lazing about after the plow or behind his scythe , so naturally to him ! My eyes against his feet ...
... stand unabashed , and not ashamed , in the very royalty of heaven . Only vulgar natures employ their superiority to ... standing up and lazing about after the plow or behind his scythe , so naturally to him ! My eyes against his feet ...
Página 440
... stands for the tenet that matter exists only as a manifesta- tion of mind . His " Commonplace Book , " " The Principles of Human Knowledge , " and his " Alciphron " are his principal works , though his discourse on tar water , « Siris ...
... stands for the tenet that matter exists only as a manifesta- tion of mind . His " Commonplace Book , " " The Principles of Human Knowledge , " and his " Alciphron " are his principal works , though his discourse on tar water , « Siris ...
Página 445
... stand the severest test to which any book can be put that of whether or not the reader really liked it . For what a man really likes he assimilates - and in the nature of language and of things he can assimilate nothing else . To know ...
... stand the severest test to which any book can be put that of whether or not the reader really liked it . For what a man really likes he assimilates - and in the nature of language and of things he can assimilate nothing else . To know ...
Página 448
... of all the rubbish that came out . Some of these novels I have read ; some of them actually stand on my shelves ; and I declare that any- thing more dreary and unprofitable it is difficult to imagine 448 SIR WALTER BESANT.
... of all the rubbish that came out . Some of these novels I have read ; some of them actually stand on my shelves ; and I declare that any- thing more dreary and unprofitable it is difficult to imagine 448 SIR WALTER BESANT.
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The World's Best Essays, from the Earliest Period to the Present Time, Volumen2 David Josiah Brewer Vista de fragmentos - 1900 |
Términos y frases comunes
actions Anatomy of Melancholy appear Aristotle beauty behold body Boethius born called cause character Church common conceive creatures Danton darkness death desire devil divinity doth earth effect essays faculty faith fear feel French literature friends Gastronomy genius give hand happiness hath heaven honor human Iago idea imagination intellectual judgment knowledge labor laws less liberty light literature live look manner MARQUIS OF BECCARIA matter means mind moral nature never object observed opinion Othello ourselves pain passion person philosophy piece Plato pleasure poet poetical poetry present principles qualities reason Religio Medici religion Robespierre Saint Paul sense Shakespeare song soul species spirit sublime sweet taste thee things thou thought tion true truth unto Victor Hugo virtue wherein whole Wild Huntsman Wodan woman writing young Jessie