The American Monthly Magazine and Critical Review, Volumen1H. Biglow, Orville Luther Holley H. Bigelow, Esq., editor and proprietor, 1817 |
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Página 3
... character . Violent emotions are apt to be succeeded by IT has been so fashionable of late , to oscillation of public opinion in his fa- admire Lord Byron's poetry , that no vour should have prepared him for its man who valued his ...
... character . Violent emotions are apt to be succeeded by IT has been so fashionable of late , to oscillation of public opinion in his fa- admire Lord Byron's poetry , that no vour should have prepared him for its man who valued his ...
Página 6
... character . It is amusing to trace his meanderings . To - day , he offers some fruit of his fecundity as a tribute of gratitude and a testimony of regard to a noble relative ; * - to - morrow , disa- Vows the acknowledgment ; and the ...
... character . It is amusing to trace his meanderings . To - day , he offers some fruit of his fecundity as a tribute of gratitude and a testimony of regard to a noble relative ; * - to - morrow , disa- Vows the acknowledgment ; and the ...
Página 8
... character than his own . One turn of the public taste ; his gall was would have imagined that in twelve mistaken for spirit , his affectation for several and successive efforts of his feeling , and his harshness for originality . muse ...
... character than his own . One turn of the public taste ; his gall was would have imagined that in twelve mistaken for spirit , his affectation for several and successive efforts of his feeling , and his harshness for originality . muse ...
Página 14
... character as to proceed in the path of intelligibility , and to propose to itself some meaning and purpose , if not some moral end . In the preceding paragraph of the preface , Mr. Coleridge discovers no small anxiety to obviate the ...
... character as to proceed in the path of intelligibility , and to propose to itself some meaning and purpose , if not some moral end . In the preceding paragraph of the preface , Mr. Coleridge discovers no small anxiety to obviate the ...
Página 21
... character is such as to entitle her to much respect . The author has endeavoured in a very lame manner to support her constancy in the present instance clumsily enough by the pretext , not a very new one , and inserted , of a starving ...
... character is such as to entitle her to much respect . The author has endeavoured in a very lame manner to support her constancy in the present instance clumsily enough by the pretext , not a very new one , and inserted , of a starving ...
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