The Monthly Review, Or, Literary JournalR. Griffiths, 1815 - Books |
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Page 100
... lines of the sphere , can be perhaps in no way better explained than by a terrestrial globe : but for the rest we ... lines and circles of the globe , and that those lines and circles are opaque ; that within this glass sphere , there is ...
... lines of the sphere , can be perhaps in no way better explained than by a terrestrial globe : but for the rest we ... lines and circles of the globe , and that those lines and circles are opaque ; that within this glass sphere , there is ...
Page 101
... lines were drawn from those meridians and parallels respectively to your eye , those straight lines would necessarily pass through the glass plane within the sphere , and on this glass plane would be drawn the trut represen tation of ...
... lines were drawn from those meridians and parallels respectively to your eye , those straight lines would necessarily pass through the glass plane within the sphere , and on this glass plane would be drawn the trut represen tation of ...
Page 292
... lines printed in italics are the pure coinage of the translator's fancy : a fancy , too , no more like the nervous brevity of Sappho's imagery and expression , than we to Hercules . The two concluding verses of the first stanza may ...
... lines printed in italics are the pure coinage of the translator's fancy : a fancy , too , no more like the nervous brevity of Sappho's imagery and expression , than we to Hercules . The two concluding verses of the first stanza may ...
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acknowlege Africa animals antient appears army attention Boards Bonaparte brain Cæsar called character Charisius church consequence considerable considered contains degree doctrine Dry Rot England English epigram expence expression extract faculties favour feeling Fiorin France French give given Greek Greek Anthology Hebrew honour interest intitled Italy knowlege labour language less letter Lord Louis XVIII manner Marcus Terentius Varro means ment merit mind mode Mungo Park muriatic acid nation nature never Niger notice o'er object observe opinion original Park's passage peculiar perhaps persons pleasure poems poet poetical poetry possess praise present principles Quintilian racter readers remarks respect river says sentiments shew Society sonnet specimen spirit supposed thee Thimelby thing thou tion tithes Tixall translation turnips verse victor song volume whole words writer Zorobabel