The Quarterly Review, Volume 246William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, Sir William Smith, Sir John Murray IV, Rowland Edmund Prothero Baron Ernle John Murray, 1926 |
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Page 14
... nature . Humanism , as I understand it , means the open tolerant mind , unfettered by dogmatic authority , that finds its interest in all the finer realisations of man . The true Humanist does not limit his outlook to one school or one ...
... nature . Humanism , as I understand it , means the open tolerant mind , unfettered by dogmatic authority , that finds its interest in all the finer realisations of man . The true Humanist does not limit his outlook to one school or one ...
Page 15
... nature ; and though this theory may have some slight relevance to critical appreciation it has none whatever to creative design . In architecture it is almost absurdly inappro- priate . By an effort of imagination one might imagine ...
... nature ; and though this theory may have some slight relevance to critical appreciation it has none whatever to creative design . In architecture it is almost absurdly inappro- priate . By an effort of imagination one might imagine ...
Page 20
... natural and inevitable to those who used them . Baroque is , on the one hand , an affair mainly of detail , and on the other a matter of temperament , of the point of view from which the artist approaches his work . It is the complement ...
... natural and inevitable to those who used them . Baroque is , on the one hand , an affair mainly of detail , and on the other a matter of temperament , of the point of view from which the artist approaches his work . It is the complement ...
Page 28
... natural inherit- ances . Has he any suggestions towards betterment ? He sees a great variety of activities and inactivities , some much less wholesome than others , has he , as biolo- gist , any suggestions towards amelioration ? He ...
... natural inherit- ances . Has he any suggestions towards betterment ? He sees a great variety of activities and inactivities , some much less wholesome than others , has he , as biolo- gist , any suggestions towards amelioration ? He ...
Page 30
... Nature when man does not interfere . The chief reason for this is that if they show face in Wild Nature they are nipped in the bud . Natural Selection is all for health , but man has departed from this regime , without as yet substitut ...
... Nature when man does not interfere . The chief reason for this is that if they show face in Wild Nature they are nipped in the bud . Natural Selection is all for health , but man has departed from this regime , without as yet substitut ...
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18th century agricultural appear architect architecture Baroque Baroque architecture Baroque art beautiful Bela Kun believed better British Brutus building called capital cent century Church criticism Dante dead dividend doubt employees England English existence fact farm favour France friends Gatchina ghost Giotto give Government Grand Duke hand human Hungarian Hungary idea improved increase industry Inigo Jones interest Irish jest-book jests John Rastell labour land landlord landowner less Liberal living look Lord matter ment methods Michael Romanov mind Minister modern necromancy never Newman Oxford Pausanias perhaps Philip Webb Plutarch poetry poets political practice probably produced profits prohibition Rastell realise reason recognised regard seems share Sitwell social spirit St Petersburg stories success suggested taxation tenant things thought tion to-day told W. G. Ward whole workers writes