The Southern Quarterly Review, Volume 7Daniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell E. H. Britton, 1965 - American periodicals |
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Page 219
... feels like a mole attempting to burrow through a mountain , having no power to accomplish more than barely to trace ... feel that , whatever may have been Mrs. Gray's success , and whatever the value of her book , she certainly wrote ...
... feels like a mole attempting to burrow through a mountain , having no power to accomplish more than barely to trace ... feel that , whatever may have been Mrs. Gray's success , and whatever the value of her book , she certainly wrote ...
Page 263
... feel- ing of personal experience , of the dull fogs of the Tiber , the solemn gloom of the Roman hills , and ... feeling 1845. ] 263 Ante - Roman Races of Italy .
... feel- ing of personal experience , of the dull fogs of the Tiber , the solemn gloom of the Roman hills , and ... feeling 1845. ] 263 Ante - Roman Races of Italy .
Page 301
... feel- ing , and the aspirations of a deeply religious spirit . With her , poetry is sublimed into devotion . The subject of the longest poem in these volumes , - " The Drama of Exile , " - may seem at first sight to be singularly chosen ...
... feel- ing , and the aspirations of a deeply religious spirit . With her , poetry is sublimed into devotion . The subject of the longest poem in these volumes , - " The Drama of Exile , " - may seem at first sight to be singularly chosen ...
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