New Monthly Magazine, and Universal Register, Volume 16Thomas Campbell, Samuel Carter Hall, Edward Bulwer Lytton Baron Lytton, Theodore Edward Hook, Thomas Hood, William Harrison Ainsworth, William Ainsworth E. W. Allen, 1826 |
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Page 35
... taken , stabb'd , bleed , fall , and die . Augur me better chance , except dread Jove Think it enough for me to have had thy love . " Some one then inquired of B- if we could not see from the win- dow the Temple - walk in which Chaucer ...
... taken , stabb'd , bleed , fall , and die . Augur me better chance , except dread Jove Think it enough for me to have had thy love . " Some one then inquired of B- if we could not see from the win- dow the Temple - walk in which Chaucer ...
Page 41
... taken , we rose up to go . The morning broke with that dim , dubious light by which Giotto , Cimabue , and Ghirlandaio must have seen to paint their earliest works ; and we parted to meet again and renew similar topics at night , the ...
... taken , we rose up to go . The morning broke with that dim , dubious light by which Giotto , Cimabue , and Ghirlandaio must have seen to paint their earliest works ; and we parted to meet again and renew similar topics at night , the ...
Page 45
... taken for one of the Gods , the Priests of Jove are the first who attribute unto him the rayes of the Deity , and acknowledge him for the reall sonne of Hammon . " But happly these mentall captivities would appeare lesse strange to us ...
... taken for one of the Gods , the Priests of Jove are the first who attribute unto him the rayes of the Deity , and acknowledge him for the reall sonne of Hammon . " But happly these mentall captivities would appeare lesse strange to us ...
Page 49
... taken all this pains for a child ; and enjoy , in ima- gination , the fruits of our trouble , without having undergone the fatigue of the task , or the pangs of disappointment . In no one belief is a na- tural piety more willing to ...
... taken all this pains for a child ; and enjoy , in ima- gination , the fruits of our trouble , without having undergone the fatigue of the task , or the pangs of disappointment . In no one belief is a na- tural piety more willing to ...
Page 55
... taken to puffing himself . His pamphlet is , " not to speak it profanely , ” a “ puff preliminary , " though it differs in some respects from the model laid down by the great master of the art in " The Critic , " and seems rather to ...
... taken to puffing himself . His pamphlet is , " not to speak it profanely , ” a “ puff preliminary , " though it differs in some respects from the model laid down by the great master of the art in " The Critic , " and seems rather to ...
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