North-American Review and Miscellaneous Journal, Volume 6Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge University of Northern Iowa, 1818 Vols. 277-230, no. 2 include Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
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Page 2
... less to himself and the reader , as both would have been shortly disgusted . There is no fear that truth will ever do harm . The evil is , that when vice is brought into poetry , its grossness and vulgar sufferings are kept very much ...
... less to himself and the reader , as both would have been shortly disgusted . There is no fear that truth will ever do harm . The evil is , that when vice is brought into poetry , its grossness and vulgar sufferings are kept very much ...
Page 4
... into a childish imitation of the errours of cotemporary bards , who , he should have remembered , are much less indebted than himself to outward grace . verbal beauty , a poetry of sound is sustained throughout Moore's Lalla Rookh . [ Nov.
... into a childish imitation of the errours of cotemporary bards , who , he should have remembered , are much less indebted than himself to outward grace . verbal beauty , a poetry of sound is sustained throughout Moore's Lalla Rookh . [ Nov.
Page 5
... less innocent lays , and thought that nothing impure could float upon such rich harmony . But so it is . The wind sweeps over the lyre , and there is exquisite minstrelsy , whether it steal with pestilence from the swamps , or as the ...
... less innocent lays , and thought that nothing impure could float upon such rich harmony . But so it is . The wind sweeps over the lyre , and there is exquisite minstrelsy , whether it steal with pestilence from the swamps , or as the ...
Page 8
... less hazard , to repeat his early transgressions . The work before us gives a very pleasant story in prose , of the journey of Lalla Rookh , a princess of Hindostan , from Delhi to Cashmere , where she was to be met for the first time ...
... less hazard , to repeat his early transgressions . The work before us gives a very pleasant story in prose , of the journey of Lalla Rookh , a princess of Hindostan , from Delhi to Cashmere , where she was to be met for the first time ...
Page 15
... less , if you will believe Mr. Moore . - For example . with thee ! oh bliss ! ' Tis worth whole years of torment to hear this . What ! take the lost one with thee ? let her rove By thy dear side , as in those days of love , When we were ...
... less , if you will believe Mr. Moore . - For example . with thee ! oh bliss ! ' Tis worth whole years of torment to hear this . What ! take the lost one with thee ? let her rove By thy dear side , as in those days of love , When we were ...
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