The Quarterly Review, Volume 266, Issue 527John Murray, 1936 |
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Page 36
... course of , still more the leading actors in , the great drama of the Puritan Revolution . No historian , with the indispensable endowment of a politician , could indeed depict with com- plete and colourless impartiality the highly ...
... course of , still more the leading actors in , the great drama of the Puritan Revolution . No historian , with the indispensable endowment of a politician , could indeed depict with com- plete and colourless impartiality the highly ...
Page 65
... course , a perfect right to restrict his canvas within any limits he chooses , but it is nevertheless true that men's imaginations are greatly impressed by the spectacle of vivid figures moving amid terrific events against a background ...
... course , a perfect right to restrict his canvas within any limits he chooses , but it is nevertheless true that men's imaginations are greatly impressed by the spectacle of vivid figures moving amid terrific events against a background ...
Page 173
... course , Richard was not the man for the rare occasion and he fell . With him went also whatever was of interest about him . His later many years in which he dabbled and pottered through life as Mr Clarke ' on the whole are belittling ...
... course , Richard was not the man for the rare occasion and he fell . With him went also whatever was of interest about him . His later many years in which he dabbled and pottered through life as Mr Clarke ' on the whole are belittling ...
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adultery agricultural authority Barney Barnato become Briand Britain British cent century Church contempt County Councils court Coxwold criticism death divorce Dorchester House doubt Dr Sterne economic effect Election element England English fact France French G. D. H. Cole Germany Gibbon give Government Grosvenor Grote Gustav Stresemann historian House important India industrial interest Journal to Eliza Labour Party Land Settlement Lawrence Sterne League of Nations less living Lloyd George Locarno London Londonderry House Lord mansion marriage married ment million acres Morrow nature never Nicolson novel novelists once opinion Park Lane Parliament peace perhaps philosophy poetry political politician possible present problem readers realise reason recognised regard religious remains residence result seems sense Sir Austen Sir Richard Grosvenor small-holdings social Street Stresemann tion to-day Vachel Lindsay volume whole wife Woolf writes