Southern Quarterly Review, Volume 2Daniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell Wiley & Putnam, 1967 |
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Page 407
... sense , as the true rule for the dis- covery of the truth , much is due , but that his view was partial and limited ; for the common sense is not in anywise to be disregarded . This work of our author did not , how- ever , materially ...
... sense , as the true rule for the dis- covery of the truth , much is due , but that his view was partial and limited ; for the common sense is not in anywise to be disregarded . This work of our author did not , how- ever , materially ...
Page 441
... sense of beauty , chiefly to be drunken from the open fountains of nature , there can be no healthy and sound moral development . The sense of beauty is attended with a certain reverence ; we dare not mar what looks so perfect . This ...
... sense of beauty , chiefly to be drunken from the open fountains of nature , there can be no healthy and sound moral development . The sense of beauty is attended with a certain reverence ; we dare not mar what looks so perfect . This ...
Page 463
... sense ; to nullify the dualities of the apparent , and re- store the intuition of the real . The soul makes a double statement of all her facts ; to conscience and sense ; reason mediates between the two . Yet though double to sense ...
... sense ; to nullify the dualities of the apparent , and re- store the intuition of the real . The soul makes a double statement of all her facts ; to conscience and sense ; reason mediates between the two . Yet though double to sense ...
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