The National Review, Volumen19R. Theobald, 1864 |
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Página 2
... doubt the purest forms of aristocracy and of democracy , those , namely , in which all power is vested in an assembly of the whole people or of the whole privileged class among the people , would be inconsistent with any of the forms of ...
... doubt the purest forms of aristocracy and of democracy , those , namely , in which all power is vested in an assembly of the whole people or of the whole privileged class among the people , would be inconsistent with any of the forms of ...
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... doubt they will always represent the party which has the majority in the assembly ; but they are not themselves the ... doubts who is prime minister ; no one in the United States ever doubts who is president . This is by no means ...
... doubt they will always represent the party which has the majority in the assembly ; but they are not themselves the ... doubts who is prime minister ; no one in the United States ever doubts who is president . This is by no means ...
Página 26
... doubt that it will bear transplanting better than either of the other two , and that it is better suited than either of the other two to the circum- stances of those new commonwealths which are arising in distant corners of the world ...
... doubt that it will bear transplanting better than either of the other two , and that it is better suited than either of the other two to the circum- stances of those new commonwealths which are arising in distant corners of the world ...
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... doubt whether a higher being than ourselves will be satisfied even though we are so . In the very same manner , though the rouge of ornate literature excites our eye , it also impairs our confidence . Mr. Arnold has justly observed that ...
... doubt whether a higher being than ourselves will be satisfied even though we are so . In the very same manner , though the rouge of ornate literature excites our eye , it also impairs our confidence . Mr. Arnold has justly observed that ...
Página 53
... doubt ; if he wishes an atmosphere of indistinct illusion and of moving shadow , he must use the romantic style , the style of miscel- laneous adjunct , the style " which shirks , not or , Pure , Ornate , and Grotesque Art in Poetry . 53.
... doubt ; if he wishes an atmosphere of indistinct illusion and of moving shadow , he must use the romantic style , the style of miscel- laneous adjunct , the style " which shirks , not or , Pure , Ornate , and Grotesque Art in Poetry . 53.
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