Southern Quarterly Review, Volume 15Daniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell Wiley & Putnam, 1967 |
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Page 33
... civilization , when it was without a lite- rature . Returning into savage life , all memory of the arts once existing among them , might pass away . If there were no spectators , so to speak , of their ancient greatness and long decline ...
... civilization , when it was without a lite- rature . Returning into savage life , all memory of the arts once existing among them , might pass away . If there were no spectators , so to speak , of their ancient greatness and long decline ...
Page 114
... civilization for the world . " I cannot , " says he , in his opening lecture , " but regard France as the centre , as the focus of the civilization of Europe . It would be going too far , to say that she has always been , upon every ...
... civilization for the world . " I cannot , " says he , in his opening lecture , " but regard France as the centre , as the focus of the civilization of Europe . It would be going too far , to say that she has always been , upon every ...
Page 115
... civilization . " A complacency of this description is so peculiarly French , that it scarcely needs questioning ; and M. Guizot may easily cover his assumptions , with the difficulty of deci- ding upon the relative meaning of the word ...
... civilization . " A complacency of this description is so peculiarly French , that it scarcely needs questioning ; and M. Guizot may easily cover his assumptions , with the difficulty of deci- ding upon the relative meaning of the word ...
Contents
ART PAGE | 12 |
GUIZOTS DEMOCRACY IN FRANCE | 114 |
CRITICAL NOTICES | 253 |
Copyright | |
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