The Quarterly Review, Volume 105William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1859 |
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Page 47
... true men of their time , and foremost men in it . But Shakespeare had the spirit of all time contained within himself ; and never did he make his inde- pendence of the taste and knowledge of his day more evident , than in his manner of ...
... true men of their time , and foremost men in it . But Shakespeare had the spirit of all time contained within himself ; and never did he make his inde- pendence of the taste and knowledge of his day more evident , than in his manner of ...
Page 253
... true . Nothing , however , could be more unfounded than most of the statements which were put forth , and which Miss Acton has adopted . Dr. Odling , an able investi- gator , and a man of true science , has so completely exposed them in ...
... true . Nothing , however , could be more unfounded than most of the statements which were put forth , and which Miss Acton has adopted . Dr. Odling , an able investi- gator , and a man of true science , has so completely exposed them in ...
Page 357
... true , and his taste singularly correct , considering the time at which he wrote , when the ebb of art had already set in , and no painter was faster carried away by the receding tide , judging from his works , than Vasari himself ...
... true , and his taste singularly correct , considering the time at which he wrote , when the ebb of art had already set in , and no painter was faster carried away by the receding tide , judging from his works , than Vasari himself ...
Contents
No 209 | 1 |
The Works of William Shakespeare The Text revised | 45 |
Report from the Select Committee on Consular Service | 74 |
Copyright | |
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