The Quarterly Review, Volumes 292-293William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, John Murray, Rowland Edmund Prothero, George Walter Prothero J. Murray, 1954 |
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Page 52
... seems impossible for even the most ardent Bozolator to maintain that Dickens behaved other than badly over the whole thing . Roberts ' description in his novel has an imaginative quality of truth . All Dickens ' ruthlessness and ...
... seems impossible for even the most ardent Bozolator to maintain that Dickens behaved other than badly over the whole thing . Roberts ' description in his novel has an imaginative quality of truth . All Dickens ' ruthlessness and ...
Page 276
... seems per- fectly at home in the exciting pages in which he reveals the true stature Trotsky had attained as a literary critic by the time he was twenty - three . Soon after this period came the first meeting , in London , with Lenin ...
... seems per- fectly at home in the exciting pages in which he reveals the true stature Trotsky had attained as a literary critic by the time he was twenty - three . Soon after this period came the first meeting , in London , with Lenin ...
Page 544
... seem altogether happy as a biographer . He seems to feel his way with too much attention to all that may be significant , and the reader is soon caught up in a tangle of detail that impedes any clear- cut view of Manzoni . He was a man ...
... seem altogether happy as a biographer . He seems to feel his way with too much attention to all that may be significant , and the reader is soon caught up in a tangle of detail that impedes any clear- cut view of Manzoni . He was a man ...
Contents
CONTENTS | 45 |
JULY 1953 | 140 |
Ancient and Modern Oratory | 285 |
Copyright | |
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