The Eclectic Magazine of Foreign Literature, Science, and Art, Volumen25Leavitt, Trow, & Company, 1851 |
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Página 99
... Elizabeth , cannot bear com- parison with ours of nearer twenty millions . Then , if we enlarge our view , and take in England's transplanted progeny , whose ac- tivity and whose advancement in knowledge and science we share under every ...
... Elizabeth , cannot bear com- parison with ours of nearer twenty millions . Then , if we enlarge our view , and take in England's transplanted progeny , whose ac- tivity and whose advancement in knowledge and science we share under every ...
Página 104
... Elizabeth may be considered of the age of the Tudors was not merely pre - eminently the age of chivalry . The dark distinguished by external splendor , or by days of feudalism were past ; the burdens the absence of the intolerable evils ...
... Elizabeth may be considered of the age of the Tudors was not merely pre - eminently the age of chivalry . The dark distinguished by external splendor , or by days of feudalism were past ; the burdens the absence of the intolerable evils ...
Página 105
... Elizabeth seems to have looked for the union of the courtly graces with intellectual supe- riority in all whom she received into her favor or honored with her confidence . It is difficult otherwise to account for the neglect which ...
... Elizabeth seems to have looked for the union of the courtly graces with intellectual supe- riority in all whom she received into her favor or honored with her confidence . It is difficult otherwise to account for the neglect which ...
Página 106
... Elizabeth was too stately a thing to be employed as the vehicle for gossip : Shak- speare was not blessed with a Boswell ; no Horace Walpole had arisen to enliven his own and instruct after ages by his piquant anecdotes and lively ...
... Elizabeth was too stately a thing to be employed as the vehicle for gossip : Shak- speare was not blessed with a Boswell ; no Horace Walpole had arisen to enliven his own and instruct after ages by his piquant anecdotes and lively ...
Página 108
... Elizabeth not merely with the homage due from the sub- ject to the sovereign , but also with the gallant devotion exacted from the true knight by his lady : - THE DIVORCE OF JOSEPHINE . BY REV . JOHN S. " The frozen snake oppressed with ...
... Elizabeth not merely with the homage due from the sub- ject to the sovereign , but also with the gallant devotion exacted from the true knight by his lady : - THE DIVORCE OF JOSEPHINE . BY REV . JOHN S. " The frozen snake oppressed with ...
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admiration appeared Apuleius army battle beautiful believe Burke Cæsar called cause character Church death Disraeli Duke Duke of Choiseul Elizabeth enemies England English eyes father feel France French friends Gauls genius give Glasgow gutta percha hand head heart honor human interest John Junius King lady land less letters light literary literature living London look Lord Lord Lyttelton Louis Louis XIV Lyttelton Marlborough Mary ment Milton mind mollusk Mont Blanc nature never noble once opinion party passed perhaps person Philip Van Artevelde philosopher poems poet political present Prince Queen readers remarkable Roman scarcely Scotland seems sion Sir James Stephen Sir John Hepburn spirit Suttee Suwarrow things thou thought tion took true truth Vercingetorix Whig whole wife words writings young