The Eclectic Magazine of Foreign Literature, Science, and Art, Volume 80Leavitt, Trow, & Company, 1873 |
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Página 23
... human and ideal . They are made human by the distinct and continuous portrayal of their chief feelings , impulses , and motives . Their ideality is preserved chiefly in two ways . First , the poet avoids too minute a moral analysis ...
... human and ideal . They are made human by the distinct and continuous portrayal of their chief feelings , impulses , and motives . Their ideality is preserved chiefly in two ways . First , the poet avoids too minute a moral analysis ...
Página 130
... human machine , a thousand times more delicate and complicated than anything that has been framed by human hands . Behind the chest and abdominal walls lay the whole mystery of life , with whose faulty working our fathers could do ...
... human machine , a thousand times more delicate and complicated than anything that has been framed by human hands . Behind the chest and abdominal walls lay the whole mystery of life , with whose faulty working our fathers could do ...
Página 603
... humanity ; for it knows that vice and virtue are notes equally wrung from the human heart by the hand of circumstance , and that he who would worship Art , or understand his fellows , must study both alike with equal diligence . Of this ...
... humanity ; for it knows that vice and virtue are notes equally wrung from the human heart by the hand of circumstance , and that he who would worship Art , or understand his fellows , must study both alike with equal diligence . Of this ...
Índice
MEDICINE AND SURGERY THe Progress | 113 |
PICCOLOMINI NEAS SYLVIUS POPE PIus II | 144 |
Temple | 248 |
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Æneas archæology asked Aunt Sophy beautiful Bertha better Brantôme called character Christian Church Cromwell dear death Deianeira England English Euripides eyes face fact fair father feel felt France Frank French genius girl give Goethe hand happy heard heart Helder honor human instinct interest Irish Brigade Joseph Smith kind King knew lady laugh lived looked Lord Lord Lytton Lord Melbourne Louis XIV marriage Mary means ment meteor systems meteors Michael Middlemarch mind Miss Fraser moral nature never night novels once passed perhaps poet poor Pope present Prince Princess Prussia Purí racter reader round seemed seen smile Sophocles Stockmar story suppose talk Talleyrand tell things thought tion took turned Victor Hugo voice whole wife woman wonder words writing young