But if it be true, as we learn from history and experience, that free governments afford a soil most suitable to the production of native talent, to the maturing of the powers of the human mind, and to the growth of every species of excellence, by opening... The Pamphleteer - Pagina 450a cura di - 1816Visualizzazione completa - Informazioni su questo libro
| 1816 - 600 pagine
...suitable to the production of native talent, to the maturing of the powers of the human mind, and to the growth of every species of excellence, by opening...of Pericle,s; where, secure from further injury and degradation, they may receive that admiration and homage to which they are entitled, and serve in return... | |
| 1816 - 886 pagine
...native talent, to the maturing of the powers of the human mind, and to the growth of every ipecies of excellence, by opening to merit the prospect of...of Pericles; where secure from further injury and degradation, they may receive that admiration and homage to which they are entitled, and serve in return... | |
| 1816 - 592 pagine
...suitable to the production of native talent, to the maturing of the powers of the human mind, and to the growth of every species of excellence, by opening...country can be better adapted than our own to afford au honourable asylum to these monuments of the school of P/iidiiis, and of the administration of Pericles;... | |
| Thomas Campbell, Samuel Carter Hall, Edward Bulwer Lytton Baron Lytton, Theodore Edward Hook, Thomas Hood, William Harrison Ainsworth, William Ainsworth - 1816 - 600 pagine
...suitable to the production of native talent, to the maturing of the powers of the human mind, and to the growth of every species of excellence, by opening...of reward and distinction, no country can be better atinpted tlmn our own to iifforri an honorable ablyum to these monuments of the school of Phidias,... | |
| Charles Molloy Westmacott - 1824 - 264 pagine
...the House of Commons in 1816 at an expense of 35,000/. It has been justly said that no country could be better adapted than our own to afford an honourable asylum to these magnificent specimens of the purest style of Grecian sculpture; beneath the fostering influence of... | |
| William Paulet Carey - 1825 - 168 pagine
...suitable to the production of native talent, to the maturing of the powers of the human mind, and to the growth of every species of excellence, by OPENING...country can be better adapted than our own to afford an honourableasylumto these monuments of the school of Phidias and of the administration of Pericles;... | |
| British Museum. Department of Greek and Roman Antiquities - 1830 - 226 pagine
...suitable to the production of native talent, to the maturing of the powers of the human mind, and to the growth of every species of excellence, by opening...distinction, no country can be better adapted than our own to aiford an honourable asylum to these monuments of the school of Phidias, and of the administration... | |
| 1832 - 574 pagine
...suitable to the production of native talents, to the maturity of the powers of the human mind, and to the growth of every species of excellence, by opening...of Pericles ; where, secure from further injury and degradation, they may receive that admiration and homage to which they are entitled, and serve, in... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, John Murray, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero - 1816 - 594 pagine
...suitable to the production of native talent, to the maturing of the powers of the human mind, and to the growth of every species of excellence, by opening...of Pericles; where secure from further injury and degradation, they may receive that admiration and homage to which they are entitled, and serve in return... | |
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