The Southern Review, 4±ÇA. E. Miller., 1829 |
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19 ÆäÀÌÁö
... increasing ignorance , and propensity to ridicule the discoveries of philosophers : on the knowledge of the ancients of the properties of the magnet : on the many indications of that knowledge , as in the Book of Job : the magnet six ...
... increasing ignorance , and propensity to ridicule the discoveries of philosophers : on the knowledge of the ancients of the properties of the magnet : on the many indications of that knowledge , as in the Book of Job : the magnet six ...
24 ÆäÀÌÁö
... increase of the parent alphabet to 22 , and therefore anterior to the Pentateuch , and therefore anterior to fifteen hundred years , A. C. As all this plausible reasoning depends on the date ascribed to our modern editions of the ...
... increase of the parent alphabet to 22 , and therefore anterior to the Pentateuch , and therefore anterior to fifteen hundred years , A. C. As all this plausible reasoning depends on the date ascribed to our modern editions of the ...
76 ÆäÀÌÁö
... increasing respectability of that institution , but of similar ones subsequently formed in al- most all the large cities of the Union . Without pretending to know what have been the real causes of the superiority of art in any ...
... increasing respectability of that institution , but of similar ones subsequently formed in al- most all the large cities of the Union . Without pretending to know what have been the real causes of the superiority of art in any ...
80 ÆäÀÌÁö
... increasing number of artists , and their general im- provement . Talent is not narrowed down now as formerly , to the single walk of portrait . It looks for patronage to a higher motive than mere vanity and self - love . It looks to a ...
... increasing number of artists , and their general im- provement . Talent is not narrowed down now as formerly , to the single walk of portrait . It looks for patronage to a higher motive than mere vanity and self - love . It looks to a ...
95 ÆäÀÌÁö
... increase their income , by giving private instruction to those children whose parents desire it . " The boys usually enter these institutions from nine to thirteen years of age , and remain from five to seven years , in proportion to ...
... increase their income , by giving private instruction to those children whose parents desire it . " The boys usually enter these institutions from nine to thirteen years of age , and remain from five to seven years , in proportion to ...
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