The Collected Writings of Thomas De Quincey, Bind 7A. & C. Black, 1897 |
Fra bogen
Resultater 1-5 af 47
Side 32
... Grecian states ) it was the very meaning of citizen that he should vote and be idle . Precisely those were the two things which the Roman , the fœx Romuli , had to do— viz . sometimes to vote , and always to be idle . In these ...
... Grecian states ) it was the very meaning of citizen that he should vote and be idle . Precisely those were the two things which the Roman , the fœx Romuli , had to do— viz . sometimes to vote , and always to be idle . In these ...
Side 64
... Grecian or Asiatic cities had once possessed - a fatal guarantee to the prosperity of the state . Even the Sibylline Books , whatever ravages they might be supposed by the intelligent to have sustained in a lapse of centuries , were ...
... Grecian or Asiatic cities had once possessed - a fatal guarantee to the prosperity of the state . Even the Sibylline Books , whatever ravages they might be supposed by the intelligent to have sustained in a lapse of centuries , were ...
Side 72
... Grecian Naiad , " Or Lady of the Lake , 1 Sole - sitting by the shores of old romance 99 had been playing with our credulity . False , however , as it may be , this image of the tenth wave furnished the ancients with a strong rhetorical ...
... Grecian Naiad , " Or Lady of the Lake , 1 Sole - sitting by the shores of old romance 99 had been playing with our credulity . False , however , as it may be , this image of the tenth wave furnished the ancients with a strong rhetorical ...
Side 77
... Grecian neighbourhood in which it circulated as one of the impulses which , from time to time , renewed the sense of a mysterious involution in the invisible powers , as though they were incapable of direct correspond- 1 What was this ...
... Grecian neighbourhood in which it circulated as one of the impulses which , from time to time , renewed the sense of a mysterious involution in the invisible powers , as though they were incapable of direct correspond- 1 What was this ...
Side 81
... that point it is that Grecian geography differs from ours . The Greek Libya , as regarded the Mediterranean coast , coincided with our Africa VOL . VII G of Greek intercourse with the Libyan shore of the Mediter- THE PAGAN ORACLES 81.
... that point it is that Grecian geography differs from ours . The Greek Libya , as regarded the Mediterranean coast , coincided with our Africa VOL . VII G of Greek intercourse with the Libyan shore of the Mediter- THE PAGAN ORACLES 81.
Andre udgaver - Se alle
The Collected Writings of Thomas De Quincey, Bind 7 Thomas De Quincey,David Masson Fuld visning - 1897 |
Almindelige termer og sætninger
absolutely Ali Pacha already amongst ancient Armatoles army Bashkirs Blackwood's Magazine Byzantine Empire Cæsar called cause centuries Ceylon character Christ Christian Church circumstances civilisation connexion Cossacks danger Delphi dinner doctrine earth effect Emperor Empire enemy English Essenes existed eyes fact faith Fathers favour Grecian Greece Greek ground hand happened Herodotus honour hostile hour human hundred interest island Jerusalem Jewish Jews Josephus Judæa Kalmuck Kandyan Khan less light Mahometan meal means memorable ment mighty modern motive Mure mysterious nation nature never notice Oracles Oubacha Pacha Pagan palæstra paper Peloponnesus perhaps Pharisees political prandium prince prophet purpose Quincey Quincey's race rank reader reason regarded religion revolution Roman Rome Russian Sadducees Secret Societies sect seemed sense Sicarii spirit Suli Suliotes suppose Syria Tartar Temple thing thousand tion Torgau true truth Turkish Turks vast Vespasian Weseloff whilst whole word Zebek-Dorchi