The New-York Review, and Atheneum Magazine, Volumes 1-2E. Bliss & E. White, 1825 - American literature |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 38
Page 27
... philosophers and the polite of every age . To walk around this monument of christianity , to examine the substructions of an edifice which towers untouched over the desolations of eighteen centuries , to observe the hand of the Great ...
... philosophers and the polite of every age . To walk around this monument of christianity , to examine the substructions of an edifice which towers untouched over the desolations of eighteen centuries , to observe the hand of the Great ...
Page 31
... philosophers will not confess them to be of reason , they must then be considered as something nobler and more divine than reason itself . They may lie dormant , in the darkness of ignorance , or the corruption of gross vice ; but ...
... philosophers will not confess them to be of reason , they must then be considered as something nobler and more divine than reason itself . They may lie dormant , in the darkness of ignorance , or the corruption of gross vice ; but ...
Page 112
... philosopher's stone . He seems , however , to have been a very honest sort of man ; and it is to be observed , that those who complain most of his inaccuracy , are those who have made the largest use of the materials furnished by his ...
... philosopher's stone . He seems , however , to have been a very honest sort of man ; and it is to be observed , that those who complain most of his inaccuracy , are those who have made the largest use of the materials furnished by his ...
Page 258
... philosophers and as- tronomers engaged in measuring an arc of the terrestrial meri- dian , for the purpose of deducing the virtue of their new unit of measure . A solid sphere of platina is suspended by the * See note at the end of the ...
... philosophers and as- tronomers engaged in measuring an arc of the terrestrial meri- dian , for the purpose of deducing the virtue of their new unit of measure . A solid sphere of platina is suspended by the * See note at the end of the ...
Page 294
... philosophers , and debated the death of Cesar . None of them foresaw , in the doctrines they were en- couraging , the seeds of that revolution which not long after brought the overthrow of the throne and the aristocracy , which led many ...
... philosophers , and debated the death of Cesar . None of them foresaw , in the doctrines they were en- couraging , the seeds of that revolution which not long after brought the overthrow of the throne and the aristocracy , which led many ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
American appear Bank of England beautiful Boston Brahmins Buckel called Caspar character civil civil law Columbia College common law contract court death doctrine earth effect England English Euripides eyes favour feeling genius gentleman give habits Hadad hand heart Hermsprong honour human Indian interest John Paul Jones judge justice kind knowledge labour lady land language latitude learned less literary look M'Intosh manner ment merits Michael Forester mind moral nature never New-York Nostradamus o'er object observations opinion original party person philosophers picture pleasure poet possession practice present principles racter readers remarks respect Richard Henry Lee Robert Bage seems society speculation spirit talent taste thee thing thou thought tion treaty truth Verplanck volume whole writer written young