The American Quarterly Review, Volume 4Carey, Lea & Carey, 1828 |
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Page 8
... feelings ? " It may indeed with propriety be asked , is there any thing else which we can know of it , or by which it can be defined ? and if not , what evi- dence can we have that any thing else exists ? It is observed in the ninth ...
... feelings ? " It may indeed with propriety be asked , is there any thing else which we can know of it , or by which it can be defined ? and if not , what evi- dence can we have that any thing else exists ? It is observed in the ninth ...
Page 9
... feelings or thoughts , what proof is there of any essence distinct from these ? Do not the terms essence , substance , or substratum , mean an abstraction of the mind , which it has formed , and to which it has given a name , because it ...
... feelings or thoughts , what proof is there of any essence distinct from these ? Do not the terms essence , substance , or substratum , mean an abstraction of the mind , which it has formed , and to which it has given a name , because it ...
Page 10
... feeling into feelings , as well as the profound intellectual inquirer ? or that an accurate analysis of passion , and the thousand and mixed sensations of which it is the result , would be of no avail in edu- cation ? The mind is a ...
... feeling into feelings , as well as the profound intellectual inquirer ? or that an accurate analysis of passion , and the thousand and mixed sensations of which it is the result , would be of no avail in edu- cation ? The mind is a ...
Page 11
... feelings . But nature has not left us without a clue in this labyrinth . The single power by which we discover resemblance and relation , is sufficient to reduce this confusion to order . Our classification of objects depends on certain ...
... feelings . But nature has not left us without a clue in this labyrinth . The single power by which we discover resemblance and relation , is sufficient to reduce this confusion to order . Our classification of objects depends on certain ...
Page 12
... feelings , on the consideration of what we thus conceive or compare , with feelings , for exam- ple , of beauty , or sublimity , or astonishment , or love , or hope , or fear . These , and various other feelings , analogous to them ...
... feelings , on the consideration of what we thus conceive or compare , with feelings , for exam- ple , of beauty , or sublimity , or astonishment , or love , or hope , or fear . These , and various other feelings , analogous to them ...
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admiration ancient appear arts beauty Benares Bishop boats Boulderson British Calcutta called cape Garry captain Franklin cause character Chipewyan circumstances civil Code Napoleon Coppermine river Dog-Rib drama Egypt elephants emotions England English Esquimaux Europe European excite existence expedition favour feeling Fort Franklin French German give Goethe Hindoo honour howdah Hudson Bay company human India Indian influence interest kings labour language less living Lope Lope de Rueda malaria Manetho manner marriage means Melville peninsula ment merit Mexico military mind moral nation native nature never objects observations opinion party passed peculiar persons philosophers poet political present principles produce pronunciation racter readers relation remarks says scene Schiller seems shore Spain Spanish spirit success taste thing tion tribe truth vast voyage Walker whole
Popular passages
Page 274 - Brightest and best of the sons of the morning ! Dawn on our darkness and lend us Thine aid ; Star of the East, the horizon adorning, Guide where our infant Redeemer is laid ! FIRST SUNDAY AFTER EPIPHANY.
Page 274 - BRIGHTEST and best of the sons of the morning! Dawn on our darkness and lend us Thine aid! Star of the East, the horizon adorning, Guide where our infant Redeemer is laid!
Page 147 - They sin who tell us Love can die. With life all other passions fly, All others are but vanity. In Heaven Ambition cannot dwell, Nor Avarice in the vaults of Hell ; Earthly these passions of the Earth, They perish where they have their birth ; But Love is indestructible. Its holy flame for ever burneth, From Heaven it came, to Heaven returneth...
Page 273 - But when of morn and eve the star beholds me on my knee, I feel, though thou art distant far, thy prayers ascend for me. Then on ! then on ! where duty leads, my course be onward still.
Page 266 - Committee, that it is the duty of this country to promote the interest and happiness of the native inhabitants of the British dominions in India, and thai such measures ought to be adopted, as may tend to the introduction among them of useful knowledge, and of religious and moral improvement.
Page 125 - Fakirs' houses, as they are called, occur at every turn, adorned with idols, and sending out an unceasing tinkling and strumming of vinas, biyals, and other discordant instruments ; while religious mendicants of every Hindoo sect, offering every conceivable deformity, which chalk, cow-dung, disease, matted locks, distorted limbs and disgusting and hideous attitudes of penance can show, literally line the principal streets on both sides.
Page 125 - The number of temples is very great, mostly small and stuck like shrines in the angles of the streets, and under the shadow of the lofty houses. Their forms, however, are not ungraceful, and...
Page 147 - I have taken some pains to inform myself, really appears to me the worst, both in the degrading notions which it gives of the Deity ; in the endless round of its burdensome ceremonies, which occupy the time and distract the thoughts, without either instructing or interesting its votaries ; in the filthy acts of uncleanness and cruelty not only permitted but enjoined, and inseparably interwoven with those ceremonies...
Page 146 - When a tiger springs on an elephant, the latter is generally able to shake him off under his feet, and then woe be to him. The elephant either kneels on him and crushes him at once, or gives him a kick which breaks half his ribs, and sends him flying perhaps twenty paces. The elephants, however, are often dreadfully torn ; and a large old tiger sometimes clings too fast to be thus dealt with.