Methodist Magazine and Quarterly Review, Volume 30J. Soule and T. Mason., 1848 |
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Pagina 7
... nature he is content to consider his subject as every- thing , and himself as nothing . Objects stand out on his page in clear light , undiscolored by the hues of his own passions , unmixed with any peculiarities of his own character ...
... nature he is content to consider his subject as every- thing , and himself as nothing . Objects stand out on his page in clear light , undiscolored by the hues of his own passions , unmixed with any peculiarities of his own character ...
Pagina 12
... nature , -the commission of great crimes by persons who are not destitute of elevated sentiment and disin- terested action ; and in the delineation of men whose lives present a strange medley of folly and wisdom , virtue and wickedness ...
... nature , -the commission of great crimes by persons who are not destitute of elevated sentiment and disin- terested action ; and in the delineation of men whose lives present a strange medley of folly and wisdom , virtue and wickedness ...
Pagina 20
... nature . The great navigator , the great captain , the great priest , whose genius the genius of Isabella instinctively recognized , were all treated by him with suspicion and ingratitude . The faults of Isabella were faults engrafted ...
... nature . The great navigator , the great captain , the great priest , whose genius the genius of Isabella instinctively recognized , were all treated by him with suspicion and ingratitude . The faults of Isabella were faults engrafted ...
Pagina 21
of Isabella were faults engrafted on her nature by superstition ; and the persecutions she allowed or countenanced arose from a mistaken sense of religious duty , stimulated by a bigoted confessor . Ferdinand had no more religion than ...
of Isabella were faults engrafted on her nature by superstition ; and the persecutions she allowed or countenanced arose from a mistaken sense of religious duty , stimulated by a bigoted confessor . Ferdinand had no more religion than ...
Pagina 23
... natural order ; the heart must fasten its sympathies to them ; the imagination must see them as pictures . They are ... nature . Mr. Prescott first introduces the reader to the people and country of Mexico , and gives a luminous view of ...
... natural order ; the heart must fasten its sympathies to them ; the imagination must see them as pictures . They are ... nature . Mr. Prescott first introduces the reader to the people and country of Mexico , and gives a luminous view of ...
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