The New-York Review, Volume 4George Dearborn & Company, 1839 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 88
Page 2
... opinion is opposed the preliminary prejudice , arising from the mere fact that age has given none of its honors . In placing one of our own times in the select company of those who were glorious to our young imaginations , and who had ...
... opinion is opposed the preliminary prejudice , arising from the mere fact that age has given none of its honors . In placing one of our own times in the select company of those who were glorious to our young imaginations , and who had ...
Page 4
... opinion may be put to the test , for what can be more vague than the popular notions of poetry , and what more purposeless than criticism not controlled by some princi- ples ? The light of philosophy is needed to guide us over a tract ...
... opinion may be put to the test , for what can be more vague than the popular notions of poetry , and what more purposeless than criticism not controlled by some princi- ples ? The light of philosophy is needed to guide us over a tract ...
Page 10
... opinion that the highest po- etry is a birth from the greatest intellectual energy , there are writers of our own day who have deemed its defence no un- worthy task . The students of Coleridge's writings will recol- lect it as a ...
... opinion that the highest po- etry is a birth from the greatest intellectual energy , there are writers of our own day who have deemed its defence no un- worthy task . The students of Coleridge's writings will recol- lect it as a ...
Page 11
... opinions are to be gathered not only from his larger works , but from a multi- tude of prefaces to the volumes of old English literature , to the recovery of which he so largely contributed . We propose to quote from several of these ...
... opinions are to be gathered not only from his larger works , but from a multi- tude of prefaces to the volumes of old English literature , to the recovery of which he so largely contributed . We propose to quote from several of these ...
Page 12
... opinion and feeling upholding the dignity and moral uses of poetry . Theirs was no timid faith in the reality of an endowment mightier than the understanding , and for which imagination , in its ordinary acceptation , is an inadequate ...
... opinion and feeling upholding the dignity and moral uses of poetry . Theirs was no timid faith in the reality of an endowment mightier than the understanding , and for which imagination , in its ordinary acceptation , is an inadequate ...
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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