... faculties for action, intercourse with its fellows or advancement in any path of ambition, into shapes which it never before imagined. As in the turn of the dissolving views, there is a period when it wears neither the old nor the new phase, but the... Prose Writings of Bayard Taylor ... - Stran 47avtor: Bayard Taylor - 1862Celotni ogled - O knjigi
| Society for the Promotion of Collegiate and Theological Education - 1844 - 850 strani
...these scenes, " on witnessing the astonishing condition of affairs here, is almost one of stupefaction. One knows not whether he is awake or in some wonderful...satisfactorily to my own senses the reality of what 1 see and hear. The waves of emigration which have been so long accumulating and swelling seem at last... | |
| Society for the Promotion of Collegiate and Theological Education - 1844 - 608 strani
...these scenes, " on witnessing the astonishing condition of affairs here, is almost one of stupefaetion. One knows not whether he is awake or in some wonderful dream. Never have I had so much difficulty in estahlishing satisfaetorily to my own senses the reality of what 1 see and hear. The waves of emigration... | |
| 1850 - 1254 strani
...growing perceptions of the other are blended in painful and misty confusion. One knows not whether he IB awake or in some wonderful dream. Never have I had...own senses, the reality of what I saw and heard." * The same gentleman, after an absence in the interior of four months, gives a notion of the rapidity... | |
| University magazine - 1851 - 822 strani
...of the one and the growing perceptions of tl^e other are blended in painful and rnisty confusion, so one knows not whether he is awake or in some wonderful...my own senses the reality of what I saw and heard. " Verily the place was in itself a marvel !" he exclaims three weeks later. "To say that it was daily... | |
| Charles Dickens - 1852 - 256 strani
...aside its old instincts of value and ideas of business, letting all past experiences go for nought and casting all its faculties for action, intercourse...own senses, the reality of what I saw and heard." * The same gentleman, after an absence in the interior of four months, gives a notion of the rapidity... | |
| Charles Dickens - 1852 - 256 strani
...aside its old instincts of value and ideas of business, letting all past experiences go for nought and casting all its faculties for action, intercourse...own senses, the reality of what I saw and heard." * The same gentleman, after an absence in the interior of four months, gives a notion of the rapidity... | |
| William Henry Wills - 1860 - 492 strani
...aside its old instincts of value and ideas of business, letting all past experiences go for nought and casting all its faculties for action, intercourse...own senses, the reality of what I saw and heard."* The same gentleman, after an absence in the interior of four months, gives a notion of the rapidity... | |
| William Henry Wills - 1860 - 464 strani
...instincts of value and ideas of business, letting all past experiences go for nought and casting all itg faculties for action, intercourse with its fellows,...own senses, the reality of what I saw and heard."* The same gentleman, after an absence in the interior of four months, gives a notion of the rapidity... | |
| William Henry WILLS (Miscellaneous Writer.) - 1860 - 456 strani
...aside its old instincts of value and ideas of business, letting all past experiences go for nought and casting all its faculties for action, intercourse...whether he is awake or in some wonderful dream. Never have"I had so much difficulty in establishing, satisfactorily to my own senses, the reality of what... | |
| William Henry Wills - 1860 - 444 strani
...images of the one and the growing perceptions of the other are blended in painful and misty contusion. One knows not whether he is awake or in some wonderful...own senses, the reality of what I saw and heard."* The same gentleman, after an absence in the interior of four months, gives a notion of the rapidity... | |
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