The London Quarterly Review, Volúmenes69-70Theodore Foster, 1842 |
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... mind , and ed , so as to be borne in upon the mind with having correlations with every other part ; the weight of one stream , was more for the and whether it be from the unity of spirit interests of the subject than that pointed and ...
... mind , and ed , so as to be borne in upon the mind with having correlations with every other part ; the weight of one stream , was more for the and whether it be from the unity of spirit interests of the subject than that pointed and ...
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... mind which had been diffused widely with an easy fluctuation through the Excursion , though not changing its nature and spirit , was to take a different structure - was to be inspis- sated , as it were , and form itself into crystals in ...
... mind which had been diffused widely with an easy fluctuation through the Excursion , though not changing its nature and spirit , was to take a different structure - was to be inspis- sated , as it were , and form itself into crystals in ...
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... mind of a great Prince Arthur- man lives with him from that time forth , mix- es itself with his thoughts in all moods of his mind , reproduces itself in many combinations , passes from him in sundry shapes , and , accor- ding as his own ...
... mind of a great Prince Arthur- man lives with him from that time forth , mix- es itself with his thoughts in all moods of his mind , reproduces itself in many combinations , passes from him in sundry shapes , and , accor- ding as his own ...
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... mind , a life of think- ing for thinking's sake , led by the infirmities of his constitution to turn away from realities , เ And haply by abstruse research to steal From his own nature all the natural man ' . Coleridge's Ode to ...
... mind , a life of think- ing for thinking's sake , led by the infirmities of his constitution to turn away from realities , เ And haply by abstruse research to steal From his own nature all the natural man ' . Coleridge's Ode to ...
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... mind Of course we do not mean to say that , for for subjects ; he goes forth into the world , the purposes of a writer , there must not be and they present themselves . His mind much thinking which neither begins nor lies open to nature ...
... mind Of course we do not mean to say that , for for subjects ; he goes forth into the world , the purposes of a writer , there must not be and they present themselves . His mind much thinking which neither begins nor lies open to nature ...
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