Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 142William Blackwood, 1887 - England |
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Page 64
... thoughts , " remarked her sister . " Oh , there , he is off again ! I wonder what thought suggested itself to him at that moment . Do you know , I sometimes think that Te and I are able to communicate mentally by speechless messages ...
... thoughts , " remarked her sister . " Oh , there , he is off again ! I wonder what thought suggested itself to him at that moment . Do you know , I sometimes think that Te and I are able to communicate mentally by speechless messages ...
Page 67
... thought and brilliancy of diction , but the depth of the scholarship they manifest is per- fectly wonderful . I could not have believed that any scholar could have possessed so minute and accurate a knowledge of the writ- ings of the ...
... thought and brilliancy of diction , but the depth of the scholarship they manifest is per- fectly wonderful . I could not have believed that any scholar could have possessed so minute and accurate a knowledge of the writ- ings of the ...
Page 69
... thought and work , and of that sound basis of literary culture without which the mind cannot assimilate the teach- ing of the university , nor receive its natural and full development . The consideration of this latter point leads ...
... thought and work , and of that sound basis of literary culture without which the mind cannot assimilate the teach- ing of the university , nor receive its natural and full development . The consideration of this latter point leads ...
Page 70
... thought . They are a universal logic , used by all men , applicable to all times , and cor- responding to the fundamental and elementary conditions of hu- man thought . A study of lan- guage , therefore , has been always held to be the ...
... thought . They are a universal logic , used by all men , applicable to all times , and cor- responding to the fundamental and elementary conditions of hu- man thought . A study of lan- guage , therefore , has been always held to be the ...
Page 74
... thought , and can reclothe it in a new form , so as to express a similar mean- ing with equal force and purity in the other language . Add to this that the classical authors studied are for the most part themselves models of good style ...
... thought , and can reclothe it in a new form , so as to express a similar mean- ing with equal force and purity in the other language . Add to this that the classical authors studied are for the most part themselves models of good style ...
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able arms army Austria Axel Munthe beautiful believe Bellendean better called Captain Church Colonel course cried CXLII.-NO daugh dear delightful door doubt England English eyes face fact father feeling felt force French friends German girl give Gladstone Government hand Hayward head heart honour Ireland Irish Janet Joyce Joyce's kind King knew lady land LĂ©opoldville Liberal Unionists live look Lord Lord Castlereagh Lord Hartington Lord Palmerston means ment military mind Miss natural ness never night officers once Parliament party passed perhaps Poland present question river round Russia scarcely Scotland seemed Serk side sion Sir Charles Dilke Sitwell speak standing stood strange sure Taplow tell thing thought tion took turned Vistula voice War Office wife woman wonder words young