The North American Review, Volumen82O. Everett, 1856 Vols. 227-230, no. 2 include: Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
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Página 387
... reason : the permanent influ- ence of a story is not found in the interjectional sentiments of the author , nor in the formal moral tacked to the end , as in the fables in antique school - books , but in the subject - matter of the book ...
... reason : the permanent influ- ence of a story is not found in the interjectional sentiments of the author , nor in the formal moral tacked to the end , as in the fables in antique school - books , but in the subject - matter of the book ...
Página 409
... reason to believe they would have pursued a course of conquest in ways and by means at least as unscrupulous as the English have used . The French have never succeeded so well as the English in governing their foreign pos- sessions ...
... reason to believe they would have pursued a course of conquest in ways and by means at least as unscrupulous as the English have used . The French have never succeeded so well as the English in governing their foreign pos- sessions ...
Página 566
... reason assigned by Mr. Lewes is unquestionably the principal one . But we must be careful to distin- guish between a drama and a play . Considered as plays adapted to the stage , those of Goethe are inferior to those of Schiller . But ...
... reason assigned by Mr. Lewes is unquestionably the principal one . But we must be careful to distin- guish between a drama and a play . Considered as plays adapted to the stage , those of Goethe are inferior to those of Schiller . But ...
Contenido
BARTOLS PICTURES OF EUROPE | 33 |
STATISTICS OF INSANITY IN MASSACHUSETTS | 78 |
SYDNEY SMITH | 100 |
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