Literary Studies, Volumen1Longmans, Green, 1879 |
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Página 14
... excellence . In action they are quiet and reasonable rather than inventive and overwhelming . Their power indeed is scarcely intellectual ; on the contrary , it resides in what Aris- totle would have called their os , and we should call ...
... excellence . In action they are quiet and reasonable rather than inventive and overwhelming . Their power indeed is scarcely intellectual ; on the contrary , it resides in what Aris- totle would have called their os , and we should call ...
Página 97
... excellence in the eyes of youthful disputants ; it is a doctrine which no one will admit , and which no one can disprove . Shelley accordingly accepted it ; indeed it was a better description of his universe than of most people's ; his ...
... excellence in the eyes of youthful disputants ; it is a doctrine which no one will admit , and which no one can disprove . Shelley accordingly accepted it ; indeed it was a better description of his universe than of most people's ; his ...
Página 181
... excellence will be sometimes deeply shaded by very strange errors . To be commonly above others , still more to think yourself above others , is to be below them every now and then , and sometimes much below . Again , on the speculative ...
... excellence will be sometimes deeply shaded by very strange errors . To be commonly above others , still more to think yourself above others , is to be below them every now and then , and sometimes much below . Again , on the speculative ...
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abstract Bagehot beauty believe better called certainly character civilisation Coleridge common Constitution Corn Laws coup d'état course Cowper criticism delineation described doctrine doubt Economist Edinburgh Review England English essay excellence excitement existence expression fact Falstaff fancy father feel French Government habit Hartley Hartley Coleridge Hawick House of Commons human idea imagination impulse India instinct intellectual interest kind labour Lady Mary least literary lived Lord Lord Eldon Lord Macaulay Louis Napoleon Milton mind moral nation nature never object observe opinions pain Paradise Lost passion peculiar Percy Bysshe Shelley perhaps persons pleasure poems poet poetry political principle remarkable Rydal Water seems sense Shakespeare Shelley singular society sort speak speculative strong Sydney Smith talk theory things thou thought tion true truth Whigs whole Wilson wish words Wortley writing young youth