All lovers of literature will read Mr. Emerson's new volume, as they most of them have read his former one ; and if correct taste, and sober views of life, and such ideas on the higher subjects of thought as we have been accustomed to account as truths,... Life of Jean Paul F. Richter - Page 22by Eliza Buckminster Lee - 1845Full view - About this book
| Eliza Buckminster Lee - 1845 - 602 pages
...Essays. The subjects are better chosen. They come more home to the experience of the mass of mankind, and are consequently more interesting. Their treatment...artistic improvement in the composition." — Spectator. " Beyond social science, because beyond and outside social existence, there lies the science of self,... | |
| Charles Christian Hennell - 1841 - 568 pages
...Essays. The subjects are better chosen. They come home more to the experience of the mass of mankind, and are consequently more interesting. Their treatment...improvement in the composition . . . — Spectator . William von Humboldt's Letters to a Female Friend. A Complete Edition. Translated from the Second... | |
| Hannah Farnham Sawyer Lee - 1844 - 166 pages
...Essays. The subjects are better chosen. They come more home to the experience of the mass of mankind, and are consequently more interesting. Their treatment...literature will read Mr. Emerson's new volume, as they most of them have read his former one ; and if correct taste, and sober views of life, and such... | |
| Johann Gottlieb Fichte, William Smith - 1845 - 258 pages
...Essays. The subjects are better chosen. They come more home to the experience of the mass of mankind, and are consequently more interesting. Their treatment...literature will read Mr. Emerson's new volume, as they most of them have read his former one ; and if correct taste, and sober views of life, and such... | |
| Edgar Quinet - 1845 - 224 pages
...Essays. The subjects are better chosen. They come more home to the experience of the mass of mankind, and are consequently more interesting. Their treatment...literature will read Mr. Emerson's new volume, as they most of them have read his former one ; and if correct taste, and sober views of life, and such... | |
| James Martineau - 1845 - 214 pages
...essays. The subjects are better chosen. They come home more to the experience of the mass of mankind, and are consequently more interesting. Their treatment...indicates an artistic improvement in the composition."— fSpecta tor. "All lovers of literature will read Mr. Emerson's new volume, as the most of them have... | |
| John James Tayler - 1845 - 616 pages
...Essays. The subjects are better chosen. They come more home to the experience of the mass of mankind, and are consequently more interesting. Their treatment...indicates an artistic improvement in the composition." — Si^ctator. " All lovers of literature will read Mr. Emerson's new volume. as they most of th em... | |
| Johann Gottlieb Fichte - 1846 - 166 pages
...essays. The subjects are better chosen. They come more home to the experience of the mass of mankind, and are consequently more interesting. Their treatment...literature will read Mr. Emerson's new volume, as they most of them have read his former one ; and if correct taste, and sober views of life, and such... | |
| William Howitt - 1846 - 376 pages
...essays. The subjects are better chosen. They come more home to the experience of the mass of mankind, and are consequently more interesting. Their treatment...literature will read Mr. Emerson's new volume, as they most of them have read his former one ; and if correct taste, and sober views of life, and such... | |
| Johann Gottlieb Fichte - 1846 - 166 pages
...Essays. The subjects are better chosen. They come more home to the experience of the mass of mankind, and are consequently more interesting. Their treatment...literature will read Mr. Emerson's new volume, as they most of them have read his former one ; and if correct taste, and sober views of life, and such... | |
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