Southern Quarterly Review, Volume 15Daniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell Wiley & Putnam, 1967 |
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Page 146
... interest is therefore joined to the landed interest , in the pro- portion of one to four . Deduct this 113,000 from the total of 4,500,000 , and we have 4,387,000 proprietaries cut off from the right of representation in this chamber ...
... interest is therefore joined to the landed interest , in the pro- portion of one to four . Deduct this 113,000 from the total of 4,500,000 , and we have 4,387,000 proprietaries cut off from the right of representation in this chamber ...
Page 259
... interest which the tale possesses , if wanting in excitement , is nevertheless not without its interest . To follow thoughtfully the pro- gress of a single human experience , is to find food for thought , and necessarily of pleasure ...
... interest which the tale possesses , if wanting in excitement , is nevertheless not without its interest . To follow thoughtfully the pro- gress of a single human experience , is to find food for thought , and necessarily of pleasure ...
Page 375
... interest which can be genera- ted by the development of individual character . The reader is unconsciously drawn away from the State itself , and finds all his thoughts and all his sympathies engaged on behalf of some man whose talents ...
... interest which can be genera- ted by the development of individual character . The reader is unconsciously drawn away from the State itself , and finds all his thoughts and all his sympathies engaged on behalf of some man whose talents ...
Contents
ART PAGE | 12 |
GUIZOTS DEMOCRACY IN FRANCE | 114 |
CRITICAL NOTICES | 253 |
Copyright | |
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