The Athenaeum: A Magazine of Literary and Miscellaneous Information ..., Volume 1John Aikin Longmans, Hurst, Rees, and Orme, 1807 - Literature, Modern |
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Page 4
... possessed with a strong propensity to appear as a man of fashion , who made a single mourning coat serve , by help of scouring , turning , and fresh but- tons , for half the potentates in Europe . The mode seems to have descended as low ...
... possessed with a strong propensity to appear as a man of fashion , who made a single mourning coat serve , by help of scouring , turning , and fresh but- tons , for half the potentates in Europe . The mode seems to have descended as low ...
Page 24
... possessing not only a sound mind , but an uncommon degree of sagacity ; but if he had been known only by his schemes of mending the climates of the frigid and torrid zones by towing ice - islands from the pole to the equator , and of ...
... possessing not only a sound mind , but an uncommon degree of sagacity ; but if he had been known only by his schemes of mending the climates of the frigid and torrid zones by towing ice - islands from the pole to the equator , and of ...
Page 52
... possessed . To recompense his learned readers , he gave in the second volume some opuscula of Jamblichus , Porphyry , Procopius of Gaza , Choricius , Diomede , Herodian the grammarian , & c . and many ancient scholia , passages and ...
... possessed . To recompense his learned readers , he gave in the second volume some opuscula of Jamblichus , Porphyry , Procopius of Gaza , Choricius , Diomede , Herodian the grammarian , & c . and many ancient scholia , passages and ...
Page 56
... possessed nothing more than works of ascetic morality and theology , M. de Villoison found nothing more important , and after having employ- ed about a month in the laborious and fruitless research , he pro- ceeded to Salonica , from ...
... possessed nothing more than works of ascetic morality and theology , M. de Villoison found nothing more important , and after having employ- ed about a month in the laborious and fruitless research , he pro- ceeded to Salonica , from ...
Page 59
... possessed of sufficient informa- tion to understand him , and already capable , for the most part , of becoming teachers themselves ; he was aiming to revive and dissemi- nate a taste for that beautiful language , the love of which had ...
... possessed of sufficient informa- tion to understand him , and already capable , for the most part , of becoming teachers themselves ; he was aiming to revive and dissemi- nate a taste for that beautiful language , the love of which had ...
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Popular passages
Page 255 - Millions of spiritual creatures walk the earth Unseen, both when we wake, and when we sleep : All these with ceaseless praise his works behold Both day and night.
Page 459 - Morpheus' train. But hail! thou Goddess sage and holy! Hail, divinest Melancholy! Whose saintly visage is too bright To hit the sense of human sight, And therefore to our weaker view...
Page 110 - Fables: but he frankly declared to me his mind, " that he did not delight in that learning, because he did not believe they were true;" for which reason I found he had very much turned his studies, for about a twelvemonth past, into the lives and adventures of Don Bellianis of Greece, Guy of Warwick, the Seven Champions, and other historians of that age.
Page 66 - Chronicles of England, France, Spain, and the adjoining Countries, from the latter part of the Reign of Edward II. to the Coronation of Henry IV.
Page 55 - Like fears that cross the mind, Like meteors gleaming through the night, Like thunders on the wind. The vision of the tomb is past ; Beyond it who can tell In what mysterious region cast Immortal spirits dwell ? I know not, but I soon shall know When life's sore conflicts cease, When this desponding heart lies low, And I shall rest in peace. For see, on Death's bewildering wave, The rainbow Hope arise, A bridge of glory o'er the grave, That bends beyond the skies.
Page 105 - Our British gardeners, on the contrary, instead of humouring nature, love to deviate from it as much as possible. Our trees rise in cones, globes, and pyramids. We see the marks of the scissors upon every plant and bush.
Page 449 - To bear the ills they have, Than fly to others that they know not of.
Page 508 - Biblicse, being a connected, serins of Notes on the Text and Literary History of the Bibles or Sacred Books of the Jews and Christians, and on the Bibles or Books accounted Sacred by the Mahometans, Hindus, Parsees, Chinese, and Scandinavians.
Page 465 - ... made to them, but they fled in such order into the woods, that it booted them not to follow : so going on their way forward till they came to a river, which they could not...