| Authors, French - 1963 - 498 pages
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| C. C. Barfoot - English literature - 1999 - 368 pages
...Atkinson, "Keats and Kamchatka"; Letters, II, l00. 43. Letters, I, 277. 44. The Spectator, III, 574-75. The Understanding, indeed, opens an infinite Space...faint Efforts, is immediately at a Stand, and finds her self swallowed up in the Immensity of the Void that surrounds it: Our Reason can pursue a Particle... | |
| Robin Dix - Poetry - 2000 - 304 pages
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| James Noggle - Literary Criticism - 2001 - 288 pages
...true picture of the infinitesimal gradations of experience as the understanding knows they must be: The Understanding, indeed, opens an infinite Space...faint efforts, is immediately at a stand, and finds her self swallowed up in the Immensity of the Void that surrounds it: Our Reason can pursue a Particle... | |
| Kevis Goodman - Literary Criticism - 2004 - 268 pages
...or to compare, in his Thoughts, a length of thousand Diameters of the Earth, with that of a Million, he will quickly find that he has no different Measures...such extraordinary Degrees of Grandeur or Minuteness . . . [T] he Imagination, after a few faint Efforts, is immediately at a stand, and finds her self... | |
| Kevis Goodman - Literary Criticism - 2004 - 268 pages
...or to compare, in his Thoughts, a length of thousand Diameters of the Earth, with that of a Million, he will quickly find that he has no different Measures...his Mind, adjusted to such extraordinary Degrees of Grandeuror Minuteness . . . [T] he Imagination, after a few faint Efforts, is immediately at a stand,... | |
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