The New-York Review, Volume 4George Dearborn & Company, 1839 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 77
Page 3
... feeling of flight ; and , as I sweep along the plain , can look up toward the bird of Jove , and can follow him and say : Sovereign of the air , who de- scendest on thy nest in the cleft of the inaccessible rock , who makest the ...
... feeling of flight ; and , as I sweep along the plain , can look up toward the bird of Jove , and can follow him and say : Sovereign of the air , who de- scendest on thy nest in the cleft of the inaccessible rock , who makest the ...
Page 12
... feeling upholding the dignity and moral uses of poetry . Theirs was no timid faith in the reality of an endowment mightier than the understanding , and for which imagination , in its ordinary acceptation , is an inadequate term . This ...
... feeling upholding the dignity and moral uses of poetry . Theirs was no timid faith in the reality of an endowment mightier than the understanding , and for which imagination , in its ordinary acceptation , is an inadequate term . This ...
Page 14
... feeling of the man and the woman immediately after their disobedience ? It manifested a nature , doubtless not of the original purity , and yet not of absolute wickedness . The first emotion was the sense of shame . Now shame is not the ...
... feeling of the man and the woman immediately after their disobedience ? It manifested a nature , doubtless not of the original purity , and yet not of absolute wickedness . The first emotion was the sense of shame . Now shame is not the ...
Page 15
... feelings , something deeply touching in its min- gled humility and ambition- the flutterings of hope and the despondency of mere humanity - its " voices of two different natures . " It awakens a christian commiseration , and we long to ...
... feelings , something deeply touching in its min- gled humility and ambition- the flutterings of hope and the despondency of mere humanity - its " voices of two different natures . " It awakens a christian commiseration , and we long to ...
Page 22
... feeling from poems of long established fame . From the severe and chaste models of ancient imagination — from Pindar and Homer , ( from the latter , especially , instances will suggest them- selves to the classical student ) and from ...
... feeling from poems of long established fame . From the severe and chaste models of ancient imagination — from Pindar and Homer , ( from the latter , especially , instances will suggest them- selves to the classical student ) and from ...
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admirable American appear beautiful boiler brine called carbonic acid Carlyle cause character Christian Church Columbia counties common congress connexion cultivation discoveries divine earth evidence exclusive existence facts faith feeling feet Genesee river genius geological geologists geology give gneiss Goethe grant graywacke gypsum heart honor human hundred imagination infusoria intellectual interest knowledge Lake Ontario language less limestone living look LUCRETIUS man's matter means ment mind mode moral nature navigation never object observed opinion original peculiar perfect petrifactions philosophy Pindar poems poet poet's poetic poetry prayer present principles produced racter readers religion remarkable respect Rituals rock salt rocks sandstone Sartor Resartus sense soul sound speak spirit steam style taste thing thought tion true truth ture VII.-VOL vols volume whole words Wordsworth's writings York