The Quarterly Review, Volume 11William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, Sir William Smith, Rowland Edmund Prothero Baron Ernle, George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1814 |
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Page 9
... feeling and expression , together with the substitution of false refinement and metaphysical mysti- cism , has always been the sin that most easily beset its votaries ; it is , therefore , on account of their general applicability to ...
... feeling and expression , together with the substitution of false refinement and metaphysical mysti- cism , has always been the sin that most easily beset its votaries ; it is , therefore , on account of their general applicability to ...
Page 12
... feelings which they are calculated to inspire , as can hardly be equalled by those of any poets in the most advanced period of mental luxury and refinement . The cloud of anger and indignation that for a moment obscures the ...
... feelings which they are calculated to inspire , as can hardly be equalled by those of any poets in the most advanced period of mental luxury and refinement . The cloud of anger and indignation that for a moment obscures the ...
Page 15
... feeling , the judgment , and the fancy . ' Le Paradis n'offre presqu'aucune de ces ressources . Tout y est éclat et lumière . Une contemplation intellectuelle y est la seule jouissance . Des solutions de difficultés et des explications ...
... feeling , the judgment , and the fancy . ' Le Paradis n'offre presqu'aucune de ces ressources . Tout y est éclat et lumière . Une contemplation intellectuelle y est la seule jouissance . Des solutions de difficultés et des explications ...
Page 18
... feelings , and to amuse that description of readers which was incapable of understanding the more exalted efforts of his genius , conveyed in a nobler and more durable language . The fame which they ob- tained even in his life - time ...
... feelings , and to amuse that description of readers which was incapable of understanding the more exalted efforts of his genius , conveyed in a nobler and more durable language . The fame which they ob- tained even in his life - time ...
Page 26
... feeling , perhaps , than solidity of judgment , as to the real advantages derived to Italian literature from the cultivation of the learned languages . How highly at the same time , must our estimate of the three great founders of the ...
... feeling , perhaps , than solidity of judgment , as to the real advantages derived to Italian literature from the cultivation of the learned languages . How highly at the same time , must our estimate of the three great founders of the ...
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acid Adolphus afford Aleutian islands Aleutians ancient appears avait Badham Baron Baron de Grimm beautiful Bradwardine called Chalmers character Charles Badham Chinese Chinese language colour Confucius criticism Doctor employed English Erophile fait favour feelings French friends genius Gray Greek Gulnare heart Hellenic honour Humphry Davy India island Juvenal king labour language Lara Latin Leake less letters Lord Lord Byron Lucretius Madame de Prie manner ment Minutes of Evidence modern nation nature never Norway object observed occasion opinion original passage passion persons Petrarch philosopher poem poet poetical poetry possess present principles produced qu'il quercitron racter readers remarks respect Romaic satire says scarcely seems ship-builders ships shipwrights spirit substance supposed Thames thing tion tout translator truth verse vols Voltaire volume Waverley whole words writer Zahories