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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... true statement of the ownership , management , etc. , of the aforesaid pub- lication for the date shown in the above caption , required by the Act of August 24 , 1912 , embodied in section 411 , Postal Laws and Regulations , printed on ...
... true statement of the ownership , management , etc. , of the aforesaid pub- lication for the date shown in the above caption , required by the Act of August 24 , 1912 , embodied in section 411 , Postal Laws and Regulations , printed on ...
Page 1
... true development . The modern tendency to ignore this lesson of the past is the opposite extreme to the exaggerated worship of fifty years ago . Both are equally futile . We are not better men than Vol . 246.-No. 487 . our fathers ...
... true development . The modern tendency to ignore this lesson of the past is the opposite extreme to the exaggerated worship of fifty years ago . Both are equally futile . We are not better men than Vol . 246.-No. 487 . our fathers ...
Page 10
... true that M. Hulot once drew out a characteristic French reconstruction of Selinus as a fully organised town , but the glory of Selinus was not this , but its seven Doric temples built some two to three hundred years before the great ...
... true that M. Hulot once drew out a characteristic French reconstruction of Selinus as a fully organised town , but the glory of Selinus was not this , but its seven Doric temples built some two to three hundred years before the great ...
Page 14
... true Humanist does not limit his outlook to one school or one manner . He would not set up one style against another , but in a way stands apart from them all , with preferences , it may be , yet not shutting the door on any . Mr Scott ...
... true Humanist does not limit his outlook to one school or one manner . He would not set up one style against another , but in a way stands apart from them all , with preferences , it may be , yet not shutting the door on any . Mr Scott ...
Page 15
... true in it was stated by Goethe when he said that man never knows how anthropomorphic he is ; and it was better put by Plotinus , who held that the pleasure we derive from beautiful things is due to the soul's recognition of something ...
... true in it was stated by Goethe when he said that man never knows how anthropomorphic he is ; and it was better put by Plotinus , who held that the pleasure we derive from beautiful things is due to the soul's recognition of something ...
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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