The Analectic Magazine, Volume 3Published and sold by Moses Thomas, 1814 |
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Page 2
... Honour and dignity to him were matters not of claim but of achievement . Difficulty was his severe instructor ; and , to use his own unrivalled phraseology , it was his glory to over- come the first difficulty , and to turn it into an ...
... Honour and dignity to him were matters not of claim but of achievement . Difficulty was his severe instructor ; and , to use his own unrivalled phraseology , it was his glory to over- come the first difficulty , and to turn it into an ...
Page 4
... honour of the deceased is secure , and secondly , that the wrong , if any , to his reputation , bears but a small proportion to the value of the communication . We make due allowance for the prejudice of habitual admira- tion . But we ...
... honour of the deceased is secure , and secondly , that the wrong , if any , to his reputation , bears but a small proportion to the value of the communication . We make due allowance for the prejudice of habitual admira- tion . But we ...
Page 21
... honour due to our mundane rank , to leave any considerable district in the humble condition of merely being shone ... honours of an imperial folio . These tributes of re- spect to our soil , and to what it carries , are multiplying so ...
... honour due to our mundane rank , to leave any considerable district in the humble condition of merely being shone ... honours of an imperial folio . These tributes of re- spect to our soil , and to what it carries , are multiplying so ...
Page 25
... honour of Louis XIV . De la Salle also went to France , where he was appointed to the command of an expedition of four ships carrying 170 landsmen , and the other materials for a projected settlement at the mouth of the Mississippi ...
... honour of Louis XIV . De la Salle also went to France , where he was appointed to the command of an expedition of four ships carrying 170 landsmen , and the other materials for a projected settlement at the mouth of the Mississippi ...
Page 40
... honour and dis- grace as the first objects of human pursuit and avoidance . Innu- merable instances , however , of the same sort , in totally different circumstances , show the power of human nature to do the same acts without the bribe ...
... honour and dis- grace as the first objects of human pursuit and avoidance . Innu- merable instances , however , of the same sort , in totally different circumstances , show the power of human nature to do the same acts without the bribe ...
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acquired admiration Analectic ancient appears Aristophanes attention beautiful Bossuet Brehon law Bride of Abydos Burke character chief circumstances colours Cossack crusaders death degree effect eloquence English Euripides excited expression fancy father favour feelings Fisher Ames French friends genius Greek habits heart honour human imagination Indian interest Ireland Irish labour language literary literature Lord Lord Byron Madame de Genlis Madame de Staël manner Matthew of Edessa means ment merit mind moral native nature never objects observed opinion original party passions patriot perhaps persons philosophical pleasure poem poet poetical poetry political possession present principles racter reader received religion remarkable respect Samuel Adams says scene seems sentiment society spirit style sublime talents taste thee thing thou thought tion translation truth virtue volume Wahabee whole writer youth