Letters on various subjects. [With a portrait.], Volym 5Simpkin, Marshall&Company, 1847 |
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Sida 13
... seem a paradox , but I rather cherish the feeling . It is , indeed , a pleasing smart , a bitter sweet ; so much so that the more I have , the more I want , without any alteration in the compound . Do you understand me ? And yet all ...
... seem a paradox , but I rather cherish the feeling . It is , indeed , a pleasing smart , a bitter sweet ; so much so that the more I have , the more I want , without any alteration in the compound . Do you understand me ? And yet all ...
Sida 31
... seems , by way of reward , that it is ready to stand forward in my defence : " Philoso- phers , " said the leaf , " have long deemed any theory to be true which accorded with all the facts of the science . It is upon this principle that ...
... seems , by way of reward , that it is ready to stand forward in my defence : " Philoso- phers , " said the leaf , " have long deemed any theory to be true which accorded with all the facts of the science . It is upon this principle that ...
Sida 47
... seems , discarded it quite from your vocabulary . But do you find it quite so easy a thing to expel it from your understanding , or to blot it from your memory ? I will venture to assert , it lives there still , and bids defi- ance to ...
... seems , discarded it quite from your vocabulary . But do you find it quite so easy a thing to expel it from your understanding , or to blot it from your memory ? I will venture to assert , it lives there still , and bids defi- ance to ...
Sida 48
... seem shy of the term when applied to a state of non - exist- ence . But it expresses your meaning , doubtless , better and more strongly than any other word in our language . I wonder , however , why you venture to use it so freely ; as ...
... seem shy of the term when applied to a state of non - exist- ence . But it expresses your meaning , doubtless , better and more strongly than any other word in our language . I wonder , however , why you venture to use it so freely ; as ...
Sida 49
... seem needless to inflict any other punishment than that of leaving him to the horrors of his gloomy imagination , till he feel himself to want those joys and comforts of which he hath laboured to deprive others . " The Sheffield bard ...
... seem needless to inflict any other punishment than that of leaving him to the horrors of his gloomy imagination , till he feel himself to want those joys and comforts of which he hath laboured to deprive others . " The Sheffield bard ...
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Letters on various subjects. [With a portrait.], Volym 5 James Caughey Obegränsad förhandsgranskning - 1847 |
Letters on various subjects. [With a portrait.], Volym 5 James Caughey Obegränsad förhandsgranskning - 1847 |
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