The Port FolioEditor and Asbury Dickens, 1820 |
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Side 256
... feeling ; -too much perhaps certainly too much it would be , if their feelings were not often as correct as they are acute ; and did not therefore stand them adequately instead of the judgment and principle of men . But then it is a ...
... feeling ; -too much perhaps certainly too much it would be , if their feelings were not often as correct as they are acute ; and did not therefore stand them adequately instead of the judgment and principle of men . But then it is a ...
Side 340
... Feeling , to Imagination , and to Judg- ment ; and consider them as the leading powers to which subor- dinate ones ... feeling , is to be understood that nice sensibility which catches even the slightest impression , and in which there ...
... Feeling , to Imagination , and to Judg- ment ; and consider them as the leading powers to which subor- dinate ones ... feeling , is to be understood that nice sensibility which catches even the slightest impression , and in which there ...
Side 344
... feeling and ima- gination , a reference has been made to another one , whose pro- vince it is to control the excesses of both . When the two for mer are feeble , the person in whom this is the case , must , for- ́ever , keep the rank ...
... feeling and ima- gination , a reference has been made to another one , whose pro- vince it is to control the excesses of both . When the two for mer are feeble , the person in whom this is the case , must , for- ́ever , keep the rank ...
Indhold
ADDRESS TO THE READER | 9 |
The Pastors Fireside a novel By Miss Jane Porter | 32 |
Account of Bataviaits inhabitants commerce cli | 46 |
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admiration Anacreon Anastasius appears auld lang syne bar iron Batavia beautiful blow-pipe Bois-Guilbert called cause character Chio Christian circumstances colour considered constitution court Critias daugh death delight duty EDWARD GIBBON effect England English Eurypyle evil excited existence eyes father favour feeling French Gibbon give Greek hand happy heart heaven honour imagination interest islands Ismayl Ivanhoe Jehovah judge judicial jury labours lady language learned letters libel liberty Lord manner Maryam matter means ment mind moral nation nature never object observed opinion passions penal laws person Pisistratus poet political PORT FOLIO prayer present principles published readers Rebecca remarks respect Saxon says scene Sesto Calende slavery slaves society soul spirit TACITUS Templar thee thing thou tion truth virtue volume whole words writer young