The Literary Magazine, and American Register, Volume 6, Issue 38John Conrad & Company, 1806 |
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Page 337
... kind ; and Homer , whose genius and subject led him to the peculiar contemplation of such scenes in nature , has drawn copiously from this source . seems frequently , like his aged Chryses , to have walked musing on the shore of the ...
... kind ; and Homer , whose genius and subject led him to the peculiar contemplation of such scenes in nature , has drawn copiously from this source . seems frequently , like his aged Chryses , to have walked musing on the shore of the ...
Page 340
... kind was struck by Charles I , at Newark : it is of a dia- mond form , and , by its inscription , seems intended to have been a pledge for a shilling . A piece of lead or pewter , with a small square bar of copper struck through it ...
... kind was struck by Charles I , at Newark : it is of a dia- mond form , and , by its inscription , seems intended to have been a pledge for a shilling . A piece of lead or pewter , with a small square bar of copper struck through it ...
Page 341
... kind of instinctive horror from every appearance of deceit , and ask , with indignant emotion , Can virtue hold alliance with false- hood ? Can good come out of evil ? Yet the fact is indisputable , that many persons , in other respects ...
... kind of instinctive horror from every appearance of deceit , and ask , with indignant emotion , Can virtue hold alliance with false- hood ? Can good come out of evil ? Yet the fact is indisputable , that many persons , in other respects ...
Page 343
... kind , he does not find himself under the necessity of accommodating him- self to their habits of thinking , and , by the terms which he uses , to en- courage opinions which he thinks erroneous ? Is there a disciple of Berkeley , of ...
... kind , he does not find himself under the necessity of accommodating him- self to their habits of thinking , and , by the terms which he uses , to en- courage opinions which he thinks erroneous ? Is there a disciple of Berkeley , of ...
Page 345
... kind arise , they are the mistakes of misapprehen- sion , or the self - created illusions of a timid or selfish mind . Prudent men will tread the ground of new opinions with cautious steps ; modest men will judge with delibe- ration ...
... kind arise , they are the mistakes of misapprehen- sion , or the self - created illusions of a timid or selfish mind . Prudent men will tread the ground of new opinions with cautious steps ; modest men will judge with delibe- ration ...
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afford America appears army assembly authority cacao Caracas character circumstances civil coast colour commerce conduct consequence consider coun Creoles dollars per cwt duty elector of Hesse ence England English equally error established evil expence exports force France French genius germen give Guayra Hanover Hanoverian heliacal heliacal rising Indians influence inhabitants interest Ireland Jews labour land lative legislator legislature less Literary Magazine living Lubec Maracaibo marriage ment military millions mind Missouri morality Moses mother country nations natural neral never nish object officers opinion Osage Osage river persons philosophy Pisces Pleiads political possession principles produce province rabbi racter radicle reason religion religious respect river royal says Siege of Damascus sion slaves Spain Spaniards Spanish Spanish colonies stranger tained talmud ther thing tion trade troops truth ture usury vernment vessels villages whole XXXVIII