The British Critic: A New Review, Volume 4F. and C. Rivington, 1815 - English literature |
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Page 92
... soon after they have been confirmed , on this important occasion . The usual scruples and objections respecting their youth and ignorance are , for the most part , extremely ill - founded , reprehensible , and injurious . Surely we ...
... soon after they have been confirmed , on this important occasion . The usual scruples and objections respecting their youth and ignorance are , for the most part , extremely ill - founded , reprehensible , and injurious . Surely we ...
Page 108
... soon acquired a facility in using the phrases current among these poor people , and even caught some- thing of their particular looks and gestures . Those peculiarities , which while they too easily pass among some as signs of grace ...
... soon acquired a facility in using the phrases current among these poor people , and even caught some- thing of their particular looks and gestures . Those peculiarities , which while they too easily pass among some as signs of grace ...
Page 117
... soon alas ! he fell from that happy estate . Through the en- ticements of Satan , and the abuse of those powers of free - will with which he was created , he brake the commandment of God , and , incurring the punishment threatened , he ...
... soon alas ! he fell from that happy estate . Through the en- ticements of Satan , and the abuse of those powers of free - will with which he was created , he brake the commandment of God , and , incurring the punishment threatened , he ...
Page 125
... soon see , had sensibly declined , want of liberty rather than want of im- perial encouragement was the cause . The great men in the age Augustus had received the first impulse to their genius before the destruction of the republic ...
... soon see , had sensibly declined , want of liberty rather than want of im- perial encouragement was the cause . The great men in the age Augustus had received the first impulse to their genius before the destruction of the republic ...
Page 127
... soon as they have reached perfection , they must become stationary . Any attempt to bring them further , must necessarily deprive them of a part of their beauty ; since moving in a definite curve , we cannot go beyond the summit without ...
... soon as they have reached perfection , they must become stationary . Any attempt to bring them further , must necessarily deprive them of a part of their beauty ; since moving in a definite curve , we cannot go beyond the summit without ...
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