National Review, Volume 3Robert Theobold, 1856 |
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Page 2
... appear to ourselves , we are also in some sense what we appear to others ; and though we should hardly be willing to exchange our self - knowledge for that of others , yet should " The Gods the giftie gie us To see ourselves as others ...
... appear to ourselves , we are also in some sense what we appear to others ; and though we should hardly be willing to exchange our self - knowledge for that of others , yet should " The Gods the giftie gie us To see ourselves as others ...
Page 21
... appears to have lost as yet but little of the original freshness of its first application . " Old political and social questions too are ever recurring , and every generation will find that some of the satires of a past one have been ...
... appears to have lost as yet but little of the original freshness of its first application . " Old political and social questions too are ever recurring , and every generation will find that some of the satires of a past one have been ...
Page 27
... appears in an unfinished form appended to that story . By degrees , how- ever , his engagements absorbed his energies , and his whole time appears to have become devoted to a round of genuine Parisian gaiety . One day goes the same way ...
... appears in an unfinished form appended to that story . By degrees , how- ever , his engagements absorbed his energies , and his whole time appears to have become devoted to a round of genuine Parisian gaiety . One day goes the same way ...
Page 28
... appear , and Tom Moore is astonished to find that a British public , which could swallow Little's Poems by an effort , ascribes blasphemy to a work which he flattered himself was the most moral of all his productions , and that there is ...
... appear , and Tom Moore is astonished to find that a British public , which could swallow Little's Poems by an effort , ascribes blasphemy to a work which he flattered himself was the most moral of all his productions , and that there is ...
Page 39
... appear- ance in society that we learn from his editor that " his last days were peaceful and happy : his domestic sorrows , his literary triumphs , seem to have faded away alike into a calm repose . He retained to his last moments a ...
... appear- ance in society that we learn from his editor that " his last days were peaceful and happy : his domestic sorrows , his literary triumphs , seem to have faded away alike into a calm repose . He retained to his last moments a ...
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