Southern Quarterly Review, Volume 2Daniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell Wiley & Putnam, 1967 |
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Page vii
... literature , 503-17 ; satire , 511 ; historians , 512 ; philosophy , 515 . Rowley , Admiral , his testimony res- pecting negro slavery , 347 . S. Schlegel's History of Literature , 472— 517 : general excellence of the work , 472 ...
... literature , 503-17 ; satire , 511 ; historians , 512 ; philosophy , 515 . Rowley , Admiral , his testimony res- pecting negro slavery , 347 . S. Schlegel's History of Literature , 472— 517 : general excellence of the work , 472 ...
Page 479
... literature has experienced , the nature of those changes , and their relation to the peculiar circumstances by which they were surrounded , all present themselves to us for notice and discussion . It is our duty , as it will be our ...
... literature has experienced , the nature of those changes , and their relation to the peculiar circumstances by which they were surrounded , all present themselves to us for notice and discussion . It is our duty , as it will be our ...
Page 516
... literature of Rome , for it produced those rhetorical affectations which exhibit them- selves most prominently and unnecessarily in Seneca . With this we must conclude our scanty and imperfect notice of the history of literature among ...
... literature of Rome , for it produced those rhetorical affectations which exhibit them- selves most prominently and unnecessarily in Seneca . With this we must conclude our scanty and imperfect notice of the history of literature among ...
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