The Quarterly Review, Volumes 237-238William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, John Murray, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1922 |
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Page 10
... critics assign the first 170 lines of Act II , Sc . 4 , to this hand , though other passages may also be his work . The passage alluded to is a scene where Sir Thomas More pacifies a mob of ' prentices and other rioters against the ...
... critics assign the first 170 lines of Act II , Sc . 4 , to this hand , though other passages may also be his work . The passage alluded to is a scene where Sir Thomas More pacifies a mob of ' prentices and other rioters against the ...
Page 19
... critics had wandered from the death of the French king to those of Monsieur Boileau , Monsieur Racine , and Monsieur Corneille , and several other poets whom they regretted as persons who , if only they had been alive , would have ...
... critics had wandered from the death of the French king to those of Monsieur Boileau , Monsieur Racine , and Monsieur Corneille , and several other poets whom they regretted as persons who , if only they had been alive , would have ...
Page 23
... critic justice , he seems to have conformed his own behaviour very closely to the design of the performance , as he conceived it . For any reference he makes to the music , he might have been deaf . While the rest of the audience sat ...
... critic justice , he seems to have conformed his own behaviour very closely to the design of the performance , as he conceived it . For any reference he makes to the music , he might have been deaf . While the rest of the audience sat ...
Page 54
... critic has to penetrate , as well as he can , the poet's art and the historian's method . He is not distracted by any extraneous circumstance , as is the case in the biographies of most eminent men of letters . The development of ...
... critic has to penetrate , as well as he can , the poet's art and the historian's method . He is not distracted by any extraneous circumstance , as is the case in the biographies of most eminent men of letters . The development of ...
Page 56
... critics persisted in seeing in him nothing but a writer of } ; ' vers de société . ' It is true that this injustice long pur- sued his maturer art , but it is not less true that in his original character he was not to be distinguished ...
... critics persisted in seeing in him nothing but a writer of } ; ' vers de société . ' It is true that this injustice long pur- sued his maturer art , but it is not less true that in his original character he was not to be distinguished ...
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