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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... Remarks on the Calumnies published in the Quar- terly Review , on the English Ship - builders . 2. Substance of the Speech of William Harrison , Esq . before the Select Committee of the House of Com- mons , on East India - built ...
... Remarks on the Calumnies published in the Quar- terly Review , on the English Ship - builders . 2. Substance of the Speech of William Harrison , Esq . before the Select Committee of the House of Com- mons , on East India - built ...
Page 16
... remark that the age of Dante was , by an extraordi- nary coincidence of circumstances as well as talent , the period at which almost all the liberal arts burst into life at once in the free Country of Tuscany . Yet the fame of the first ...
... remark that the age of Dante was , by an extraordi- nary coincidence of circumstances as well as talent , the period at which almost all the liberal arts burst into life at once in the free Country of Tuscany . Yet the fame of the first ...
Page 29
... remarks and frequent illustrations of the former , poem . We are , at the same time , sensible of the general langour which pervades that version , so different from the spirit which animates the original ; and we consider the Orlando ...
... remarks and frequent illustrations of the former , poem . We are , at the same time , sensible of the general langour which pervades that version , so different from the spirit which animates the original ; and we consider the Orlando ...
Page 31
... remark does not savour rather of unnecessary aus- sterity than of the spirit of indulgent criticism , we must leave to our readers ; for ourselves , we shall only say that it would be un- doubtedly just if the end of such a poem as the ...
... remark does not savour rather of unnecessary aus- sterity than of the spirit of indulgent criticism , we must leave to our readers ; for ourselves , we shall only say that it would be un- doubtedly just if the end of such a poem as the ...
Page 54
... remarks , however , we shall take the liberty of submitting to our readers , on passages of the work which appear to require correc tion . The advantage which Dr. Brewster attributes to the use of a transparent fibre for a micrometer ...
... remarks , however , we shall take the liberty of submitting to our readers , on passages of the work which appear to require correc tion . The advantage which Dr. Brewster attributes to the use of a transparent fibre for a micrometer ...
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