The British Critic: A New Review, Volume 4F. and C. Rivington, 1815 |
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Page 1
... admired for the various and extended learning , the profound thought , the copious aud correct document , and the calm dis- cussion for which they are distinguished . Above all , the mild and unruffled spirit which pervades the whole ...
... admired for the various and extended learning , the profound thought , the copious aud correct document , and the calm dis- cussion for which they are distinguished . Above all , the mild and unruffled spirit which pervades the whole ...
Page 2
... admiration which it once com-- manded , will be again revived , and that it will find its way not only into the libraries of the professed theologian , but the read- ing desk of the younger student . The volume before us is evidently ...
... admiration which it once com-- manded , will be again revived , and that it will find its way not only into the libraries of the professed theologian , but the read- ing desk of the younger student . The volume before us is evidently ...
Page 7
... admiration . " The beneficial effects of envy must be seen in the same light with those of hatred ; it is a remedy for evil , itself wholly free from evil . In order to make ourselves sensible of its value , we must consider how men ...
... admiration . " The beneficial effects of envy must be seen in the same light with those of hatred ; it is a remedy for evil , itself wholly free from evil . In order to make ourselves sensible of its value , we must consider how men ...
Page 8
... admire his ingenuity more than we coincide with his reasoning . The whole of the following paragraph appears too full of subtilty and refinement to produce conviction . 66 Having now considered the Nature of Malice , and made our ...
... admire his ingenuity more than we coincide with his reasoning . The whole of the following paragraph appears too full of subtilty and refinement to produce conviction . 66 Having now considered the Nature of Malice , and made our ...
Page 25
... admired more the splendor of her fortune than the lustre of her talents . ' ' To the memory of Dr. Johnson he gives no quarter , and beards the dead lion with no little courage . " I will freely confess , that his rugged exterior and ...
... admired more the splendor of her fortune than the lustre of her talents . ' ' To the memory of Dr. Johnson he gives no quarter , and beards the dead lion with no little courage . " I will freely confess , that his rugged exterior and ...
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