Southern Quarterly Review, Volume 2Daniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell Wiley & Putnam, 1967 |
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Page 45
... seems to have had this hint in view , as he introduces the same circumstance at the beginning of his description ; but the reader almost loses sight of it afterwards , in the midst of the number and variety of the images with which it ...
... seems to have had this hint in view , as he introduces the same circumstance at the beginning of his description ; but the reader almost loses sight of it afterwards , in the midst of the number and variety of the images with which it ...
Page 442
... seem to see all in one . Each beautiful thing , each dew - drop , each leaf , each true work of poet's , painter's , or musician's art , seems an epitome of the creation , -is it not God revealed through the senses ? Is not every ...
... seem to see all in one . Each beautiful thing , each dew - drop , each leaf , each true work of poet's , painter's , or musician's art , seems an epitome of the creation , -is it not God revealed through the senses ? Is not every ...
Page 470
... seem to have forgotten , that they were originally reached by the exercise of their rational faculties , properly and diligently ... seems idle indeed to call men reasoning beings , if reason is to decide arbi- trarily all matters , and ...
... seem to have forgotten , that they were originally reached by the exercise of their rational faculties , properly and diligently ... seems idle indeed to call men reasoning beings , if reason is to decide arbi- trarily all matters , and ...
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