Fraser's Magazine, Volume 25Contains the first printing of Sartor resartus, as well as other works by Thomas Carlyle. |
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Page 28
What has happened can never be recalled , and grief , therefore , is chastened by reason : but wbat has happened is so unnatural , so wrong , that reason , in its turn , is sublimed to fear . It is so terrible , none must look on it ...
What has happened can never be recalled , and grief , therefore , is chastened by reason : but wbat has happened is so unnatural , so wrong , that reason , in its turn , is sublimed to fear . It is so terrible , none must look on it ...
Page 29
To die at that time was therefore an offence against natural rule , against reason , against sentiment . The knowledge of such an event was death to the brain , death to the heart . In this seed - time of health the life was to be made ...
To die at that time was therefore an offence against natural rule , against reason , against sentiment . The knowledge of such an event was death to the brain , death to the heart . In this seed - time of health the life was to be made ...
Page 29
What has happened can never be recalled , and grief , therefore , is chastened by reason : but wbat has happened is so unnatural , so wrong , that reason , in its turn , is sublimed to fear . It is so terrible , none must look on it ...
What has happened can never be recalled , and grief , therefore , is chastened by reason : but wbat has happened is so unnatural , so wrong , that reason , in its turn , is sublimed to fear . It is so terrible , none must look on it ...
Page 32
In that sentiment no maudlin canker lies ; it is as hard and as free from poetry as a mathematical problem ; and for that reason a sentiment that , above every other , is persistently preserved . What is true of family circles is ...
In that sentiment no maudlin canker lies ; it is as hard and as free from poetry as a mathematical problem ; and for that reason a sentiment that , above every other , is persistently preserved . What is true of family circles is ...
Page 35
Third amongst the perils incident to the early life are those inflicted by reason of ignorance , or false knowledge and practice , or hard necessity , or all combined . These perils begin with the earliest days of infancy and continue ...
Third amongst the perils incident to the early life are those inflicted by reason of ignorance , or false knowledge and practice , or hard necessity , or all combined . These perils begin with the earliest days of infancy and continue ...
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