The New-York Review, Volume 4George Dearborn & Company, 1839 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 65
Page 6
... faith had , by the blessing of God , returned to the innocence of its childhood — when the apathy of a decrepid superstition just cast off , the pulse of protestant England was beating with the flush of youth — when loyalty and chivalry ...
... faith had , by the blessing of God , returned to the innocence of its childhood — when the apathy of a decrepid superstition just cast off , the pulse of protestant England was beating with the flush of youth — when loyalty and chivalry ...
Page 10
... faith against the enemies of Christ ; to deplore the general re- lapses of kingdoms and states from justice and God's true wor- ship . Lastly , whatsoever in religion is holy and sublime , in virtue amiable or grave , whatsoever hath ...
... faith against the enemies of Christ ; to deplore the general re- lapses of kingdoms and states from justice and God's true wor- ship . Lastly , whatsoever in religion is holy and sublime , in virtue amiable or grave , whatsoever hath ...
Page 12
... faith in the reality of an endowment mightier than the understanding , and for which imagination , in its ordinary acceptation , is an inadequate term . This visionary faculty , which by its creative energy is foremost in the attainment ...
... faith in the reality of an endowment mightier than the understanding , and for which imagination , in its ordinary acceptation , is an inadequate term . This visionary faculty , which by its creative energy is foremost in the attainment ...
Page 15
... faith to fill the caverns of the heart ? When the knowledge of the Godhead , too vast for the fallen mind , was dispersed into the fantasies of polytheism— when a thousand deities were enshrined in gorgeous temples and in the household ...
... faith to fill the caverns of the heart ? When the knowledge of the Godhead , too vast for the fallen mind , was dispersed into the fantasies of polytheism— when a thousand deities were enshrined in gorgeous temples and in the household ...
Page 17
... faith in his own impulses . " The " Preface to the Lyrical Ballads , " and the " Supplementary Essay , " are re- plete with a sublime sense of poetry . He describes the poet as 66 a man speaking to men : a man , it is true , endowed ...
... faith in his own impulses . " The " Preface to the Lyrical Ballads , " and the " Supplementary Essay , " are re- plete with a sublime sense of poetry . He describes the poet as 66 a man speaking to men : a man , it is true , endowed ...
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admirable American appear beautiful boiler brine called carbonic acid Carlyle cause character Christian Church Columbia counties common congress connexion cultivation discoveries divine earth evidence exclusive existence facts faith feeling feet Genesee river genius geological geologists geology give gneiss Goethe grant graywacke gypsum heart honor human hundred imagination infusoria intellectual interest knowledge Lake Ontario language less limestone living look LUCRETIUS man's matter means ment mind mode moral nature navigation never object observed opinion original peculiar perfect petrifactions philosophy Pindar poems poet poet's poetic poetry prayer present principles produced racter readers religion remarkable respect Rituals rock salt rocks sandstone Sartor Resartus sense soul sound speak spirit steam style taste thing thought tion true truth ture VII.-VOL vols volume whole words Wordsworth's writings York