Eclectic Magazine, and Monthly Edition of the Living Age, כרך 24;כרך 87John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell Leavitt, Throw and Company, 1876 |
מתוך הספר
תוצאות 1-5 מתוך 76
עמוד 3
... moral and intellectual na- ture . Such as it was , it was the only wrench from which Macaulay suffered . What he was as a scholar of Trinity , he was substantially as a peer of the realm . He made , it would seem , few new friends ...
... moral and intellectual na- ture . Such as it was , it was the only wrench from which Macaulay suffered . What he was as a scholar of Trinity , he was substantially as a peer of the realm . He made , it would seem , few new friends ...
עמוד 5
... moral principles . He compares Miss Austen to Shakspeare one of the most random applications of the universal superlative ever made or shows conclusively that Wycherley was a corrupt ribald . But he never makes a fine suggestion as to ...
... moral principles . He compares Miss Austen to Shakspeare one of the most random applications of the universal superlative ever made or shows conclusively that Wycherley was a corrupt ribald . But he never makes a fine suggestion as to ...
עמוד 6
... moral , and intellectual develop- ment . When stripped of its pretentious phraseology , Macaulay's teaching comes simply to this : the only rule in politics is the rule of thumb . All general principles are wrong or futile . We have ...
... moral , and intellectual develop- ment . When stripped of its pretentious phraseology , Macaulay's teaching comes simply to this : the only rule in politics is the rule of thumb . All general principles are wrong or futile . We have ...
עמוד 8
... moral and spiritual welfare , and therefore of the utmost importance even for the prevention of robbery and mur- der . This is what Macaulay implicitly denies . The whole of dogmatic theolo- gy belongs to that region of philosophy ...
... moral and spiritual welfare , and therefore of the utmost importance even for the prevention of robbery and mur- der . This is what Macaulay implicitly denies . The whole of dogmatic theolo- gy belongs to that region of philosophy ...
עמוד 12
... moral is vigor- ously driven home by a succession of downright blows . This strong rhetorical instinct is shown conspicuously in the Lays of Ancient Rome , which , whatever we might say of them as poetry , are an admirable specimen of ...
... moral is vigor- ously driven home by a succession of downright blows . This strong rhetorical instinct is shown conspicuously in the Lays of Ancient Rome , which , whatever we might say of them as poetry , are an admirable specimen of ...
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