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Page 278
its place . been the genuine literature of Rome , and put a changeling in ‚ ' H¡ ¡ 89 [ totend eli to amet asdî ɔün B In examining the truth of a history thus formed , we will dis- cuss first the traditionary portion of it .
its place . been the genuine literature of Rome , and put a changeling in ‚ ' H¡ ¡ 89 [ totend eli to amet asdî ɔün B In examining the truth of a history thus formed , we will dis- cuss first the traditionary portion of it .
Page 279
ballads , were utterly lost and forgotten : what judgment could a critic then form of its historical truth ? Such seems to be the predicament of the early Roman history . Such , in fact , was its predicament even in the days of Augustus ...
ballads , were utterly lost and forgotten : what judgment could a critic then form of its historical truth ? Such seems to be the predicament of the early Roman history . Such , in fact , was its predicament even in the days of Augustus ...
Page 281
That Niebuhr should have perceived this truth in an age in which scholars are accustomed to comprehend a wide range of objects , and to form independent judgments , is not extraordi- nary ; especially after Wolf's Prolegomena to Homer ...
That Niebuhr should have perceived this truth in an age in which scholars are accustomed to comprehend a wide range of objects , and to form independent judgments , is not extraordi- nary ; especially after Wolf's Prolegomena to Homer ...
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Contents
The Life of Sir Isaac Newton By David now | 1 |
On Political Economy in Connexion with the Moral | 52 |
Annals and Antiquities of Rajasthan or the Central | 73 |
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