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 4
... tion so to say , resulting ( 2 ) in the stirring of emotion , which ( 3 ) is realised by the intellect , and ( 4 ) confirmed as ' real ' by intuition . These are described as concentric circles ; the appeal , for example , may get no ...
... tion so to say , resulting ( 2 ) in the stirring of emotion , which ( 3 ) is realised by the intellect , and ( 4 ) confirmed as ' real ' by intuition . These are described as concentric circles ; the appeal , for example , may get no ...
Page 9
... tion to a panegyric , as exuberant as it is uncritical , of a well - known living architect . The writers seem so much impressed with the value and importance of contemporary work that they have rather neglected the study of.
... tion to a panegyric , as exuberant as it is uncritical , of a well - known living architect . The writers seem so much impressed with the value and importance of contemporary work that they have rather neglected the study of.
Page 11
... tion of the public criticism of contemporary architecture by architects who are themselves in practice , and they appear to be in favour of it on the ground that authors and savants in the same line habitually review each other , ' and ...
... tion of the public criticism of contemporary architecture by architects who are themselves in practice , and they appear to be in favour of it on the ground that authors and savants in the same line habitually review each other , ' and ...
Page 12
... tion , without regard to the æsthetic values of the different stages of its development . With Mr Scott's demonstra- tion of the inadequacy of these methods of criticism one is in full agreement , but there is a flaw in his premises ...
... tion , without regard to the æsthetic values of the different stages of its development . With Mr Scott's demonstra- tion of the inadequacy of these methods of criticism one is in full agreement , but there is a flaw in his premises ...
Page 15
... tion and sympathy of the spectator on the one hand , and on the extent of his knowledge on the other . A Red Indian , for instance , would be a competent judge of a wigwam , but if he was suddenly transplanted to St 6 Paul's Cathedral ...
... tion and sympathy of the spectator on the one hand , and on the extent of his knowledge on the other . A Red Indian , for instance , would be a competent judge of a wigwam , but if he was suddenly transplanted to St 6 Paul's Cathedral ...
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