Blackwood's Magazine, Volume 46W. Blackwood., 1839 - England |
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Page 7
... passion " -of which we are scarcely disposed to demand much in a first act - but admits that the rest is elo- quent and tragic , and realizes all that could be effected within the narrow limits then allowed to French tra- gedy . With ...
... passion " -of which we are scarcely disposed to demand much in a first act - but admits that the rest is elo- quent and tragic , and realizes all that could be effected within the narrow limits then allowed to French tra- gedy . With ...
Page 8
... passion of love as an indispensable dramatic agent , he seems to have conceived that a great deal of the spirit of the roman- tic drama might be thrown into the classical form ; that the natural elo- quence of Antony , the jealousy of ...
... passion of love as an indispensable dramatic agent , he seems to have conceived that a great deal of the spirit of the roman- tic drama might be thrown into the classical form ; that the natural elo- quence of Antony , the jealousy of ...
Page 12
... passions of the people , he affects to control the tempest he had raised , and which he knew to be ... passion for controversy : Catholicism is for him what the empire was for the other . Both occasionally flatter their ...
... passions of the people , he affects to control the tempest he had raised , and which he knew to be ... passion for controversy : Catholicism is for him what the empire was for the other . Both occasionally flatter their ...
Page 16
... passion , a mind of very remarkable activity and fire - though , as Barante observes , it was often fire without fuel - and that he possessed something which , with- out amounting to genius , occasionally made an approach to it . As a ...
... passion , a mind of very remarkable activity and fire - though , as Barante observes , it was often fire without fuel - and that he possessed something which , with- out amounting to genius , occasionally made an approach to it . As a ...
Page 17
... passion ; often coldness - never eloquence . " Comparing him with Thomson , he observes , " Thomson has not the grandeur and precision of anti- alist M. de Maistre , and denounced in our own day as the father of sen- sualism . The ...
... passion ; often coldness - never eloquence . " Comparing him with Thomson , he observes , " Thomson has not the grandeur and precision of anti- alist M. de Maistre , and denounced in our own day as the father of sen- sualism . The ...
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Common terms and phrases
Aberystwith admiration Antediluvians Antonio appears Ataman beauty British Cæsar called character Chartist Christian colonies colour Cossacks court Crescentia dear death Dniepr earth Egypt empire England eyes father favour feel France French genius give Hadallah hall hand head heart heaven honour hope human Hume imagination influence Japhet king labour land less light Lincoln's Inn look Lord Lord John Russell means Mehemet Ali ment mighty mind miracle moral nature ness never night noble observe once Ottoman Ottoman empire Pacha pass passion picture poem poet poetical poetry political Porte present racter Russia scene seems Shakspeare side sion slave song soul spirit style Syria taste thee thing thou thought throne tion treaty ture Turkey turn Ukraine verse Villemain Voltaire Walachia Whigs whole young youth