The Portico, 3. köideNeale Wills & Cole, 1817 |
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Page 1
... minds Incline to different objects ; one pursues The vast alone , the wonderful , the wild ; Another sighs for ... mind , to leave some vestiges of the flame that burned within him . VOL . III . 1 The " life and studies " of such a ...
... minds Incline to different objects ; one pursues The vast alone , the wonderful , the wild ; Another sighs for ... mind , to leave some vestiges of the flame that burned within him . VOL . III . 1 The " life and studies " of such a ...
Page 5
... mind . But the most unequivocal triumph of early genius , over deep - rooted prejudice , that we have ever known , was exhibited at the meeting of the Friends to determine upon the future pro- fession of young West . It was certainly ...
... mind . But the most unequivocal triumph of early genius , over deep - rooted prejudice , that we have ever known , was exhibited at the meeting of the Friends to determine upon the future pro- fession of young West . It was certainly ...
Page 6
... mind , that the two officers were his father and brother , and , indeed , it was chiefly owing to his anxiety on the subject , that this pious expedition , the second of the kind that history records , was undertaken . " " Captain West ...
... mind , that the two officers were his father and brother , and , indeed , it was chiefly owing to his anxiety on the subject , that this pious expedition , the second of the kind that history records , was undertaken . " " Captain West ...
Page 9
... mind into three classes : viz . reason , memory , and imagination ; or rather , according to his own expressions , he reduces the trains of ideas into " trains connected by reasoning , trains connected by memo- ry , and trains connected ...
... mind into three classes : viz . reason , memory , and imagination ; or rather , according to his own expressions , he reduces the trains of ideas into " trains connected by reasoning , trains connected by memo- ry , and trains connected ...
Page 11
... mind of man has been enabled to quit this ball of earth , and soar to the distant planets and remoter stars , that twinkle through the immeasureable ex- panse of heaven . His attention is not directed to the bark strug- gling through ...
... mind of man has been enabled to quit this ball of earth , and soar to the distant planets and remoter stars , that twinkle through the immeasureable ex- panse of heaven . His attention is not directed to the bark strug- gling through ...
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admiration admit American appears artillery attempt Baltimore beauties believe breath brevet Byron called Captain Towson character Claudius Crozet colour command Cowper crime criticism duelling earth enemy equal equation errour Esquire Essay excellence excited fancy favour fear feel fire fluxion Fort Erie Fort George genius give hand happiness heart Heaven Hindman honour hope human imagination judgment knowledge language learned light literary Lord Byron magick means mind moral faculty musick Natural Philosophy nature never night o'er object observed opinion passion philosopher pleasure pleonasm poem poet poetry Portico present principles produced Professor of Mathematicks prove publick Queenstown question racter reader reason religion remarks Robert Adrain Sackett's Harbour scene Sempronia sine smile society soul spirit superiour taste thee thing thou thought tion truth Voltaire whole words writer