The London Quarterly Review, Volúmenes69-70 |
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Página 12
145 ) what wise man would seek to free a people ' by themselves enslaved , ' ' Or could of inward slaves make outward free ? ' And in the ' Paradise Lost ' ( xii . 79 ) Michael explains to Adam that perfect liberty could only exist in ...
145 ) what wise man would seek to free a people ' by themselves enslaved , ' ' Or could of inward slaves make outward free ? ' And in the ' Paradise Lost ' ( xii . 79 ) Michael explains to Adam that perfect liberty could only exist in ...
Página 24
... but even admitting that tion of the method which exists : yet this it may be or has been made a formidable was the whole drift of the argumentation of force derived from the consequences brought punishment , there remain objections ...
... but even admitting that tion of the method which exists : yet this it may be or has been made a formidable was the whole drift of the argumentation of force derived from the consequences brought punishment , there remain objections ...
Página 40
If he is right , a place is left where Indians and an Indian city exist as Cortez and Alvarado found them ; there are living men who can solve the mystery that hangs over the ruined cities of America ; per- haps who can go to Copan and ...
If he is right , a place is left where Indians and an Indian city exist as Cortez and Alvarado found them ; there are living men who can solve the mystery that hangs over the ruined cities of America ; per- haps who can go to Copan and ...
Página 60
... most sub- standing the utmost diversity which may exist dued shape , suggested the idea of still increasing in the forms of their organs , and in the uses to the surprise produced by these circumstances , which they are applied .
... most sub- standing the utmost diversity which may exist dued shape , suggested the idea of still increasing in the forms of their organs , and in the uses to the surprise produced by these circumstances , which they are applied .
Página 61
... however various and dissimilar the parts may be , they must be held together and harmonised all of them by some one predominating principle , and that such a principle does exist in the Gothic as much as in the Grecian . to harmony ...
... however various and dissimilar the parts may be , they must be held together and harmonised all of them by some one predominating principle , and that such a principle does exist in the Gothic as much as in the Grecian . to harmony ...
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