From that time down to its overthrow, in 1808, this institution was chiefly a political engine. The result of such extraordinary traits in the national character could not fail to be impressed upon the literature. Loyalty, which had once been so generous... Handbook of Universal Literature - Stran 321avtor: Anne Charlotte Lynch Botta - 1860 - 567 straniCelotni ogled - O knjigi
| 1850 - 642 strani
...their dignity. And so k is with the ancient religious feeling that was so nearly akin to this loyalty. The Christian spirit, which gave an air of duty to the wildest forms of adventure throughout the country, during its long contest with the power of misbelief, was now fallen away into... | |
| Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge - 1850 - 566 strani
...their dignity. And so it is with the ancient religious feeling that was so nearly akin to this loyalty. The Christian spirit, which gave an air of duty to the wildest forms of adventure throughout the country, during its long contest with the power of misbelief, was now fallen away into... | |
| Francis Bowen - 1850 - 738 strani
...dignity. And so it is witji the ancient religious feeling that was so nearly akin to this loyalty. The Christian spirit, which gave an air of duty to the wildest forms of adventure throughout the country, during its long contest with the power of misbelief, was now fallen away into... | |
| 1850 - 758 strani
...extraordinary traits in the national character markedly impressed themselves on the literature of Spain. The Christian spirit, which gave an air of duty to the wildest forms of adventure, now fell into a low and anxious bigotry, fierce and intolerant. The body of Spanish poetry and prose... | |
| William Hickling Prescott - 1856 - 754 strani
...their dignity. And so it is with the ancient religious feeling that was so nearly akin to this loyalty. The Christian spirit, which gave an air of duty to the wildest forms of adventure throughout the country, during its long contest with the power of misbelief, was now fallen away into... | |
| William Hickling Prescott - 1858 - 754 strani
...their dignity. And so it is with the ancient religious feeling that was so nearly akin to this loyalty. The Christian spirit, which gave an air of duty to the wildest forms of adventure throughout the country, during its long contest with the power of misbelief, was now fallen away into... | |
| Anne Charlotte Lynch Botta - 1863 - 764 strani
...were either silenced by their fears, or sunk away from the surface of society. From that time /own to its overthrow, in 1808, this institution was chiefly...its grotesque monument. Of course the literature of Spain produced during this interval — the earlier part of which was the period of the greatest glory... | |
| William Hickling Prescott - 1864 - 780 strani
...their dignity. And so it is with the ancient religious feeling that was so nearly akin to this loyalty. The Christian spirit, which gave an air of duty to the wildest forms of adventure throughout the country, during its long contest wjth the power of mis belief, was now fallen away into... | |
| William Hickling Prescott - 1864 - 758 strani
...their dignity. And so it is with the ancient religious feeling that was so nearly akin to this loyalty. The Christian spirit, which gave an air of duty to the wildest forms of adventure throughout the country, during its long contest with the power of misbelief, was now fallen away into... | |
| William Hickling Prescott - 1904 - 400 strani
...then* dignity. And so it is with the ancient religious feeling that was so nearly akin to this loyalty. The Christian spirit, which gave an air of duty to the wildest forms of adventure throughout the country during its long contest with the power of misbelief, was now fallen away into... | |
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