The Quarterly Review, Volumes 98-99John Murray, 1856 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 86
Page 2
... truth , of which dinner . ' Have we not seen him in the flesh nobody can lose the impression . We see in our own day ? The λάλos , again , was the man as he appeared to his friends , to not only fond of talking , but was an inve- his ...
... truth , of which dinner . ' Have we not seen him in the flesh nobody can lose the impression . We see in our own day ? The λάλos , again , was the man as he appeared to his friends , to not only fond of talking , but was an inve- his ...
Page 16
... truth being that it was rich in ease , sense , and humour ; while theirs was like the breakfasts in military novels , which seem to consist chiefly of devilled kidneys , grilled bones , and other fiery and salamandrine elements . We ...
... truth being that it was rich in ease , sense , and humour ; while theirs was like the breakfasts in military novels , which seem to consist chiefly of devilled kidneys , grilled bones , and other fiery and salamandrine elements . We ...
Page 21
... truth which lies at the foun- dation of reformatory discipline : - obtained . that the great difficulty is the perversion of taste , and the dislike of regularity , which almost universally characterise the young vagrant . The same ...
... truth which lies at the foun- dation of reformatory discipline : - obtained . that the great difficulty is the perversion of taste , and the dislike of regularity , which almost universally characterise the young vagrant . The same ...
Page 31
... truth of the matter , and that the managers of schools must be prepared to treat their pupils on this understanding . We must now recall the attention of our readers to the clause in the Parkhurst Act , which we have already mentioned ...
... truth of the matter , and that the managers of schools must be prepared to treat their pupils on this understanding . We must now recall the attention of our readers to the clause in the Parkhurst Act , which we have already mentioned ...
Page 37
... truth . Chrysostom . Who can appreciate or under- | of his works at the time of the writers who stand Aristophanes , who knows little or cite them . There was a long and constant nothing of Pericles , Cleon , Nicias ; of Eschylus and ...
... truth . Chrysostom . Who can appreciate or under- | of his works at the time of the writers who stand Aristophanes , who knows little or cite them . There was a long and constant nothing of Pericles , Cleon , Nicias ; of Eschylus and ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
admiration Algeria Algiers Allies ancient appear Archbishop Whately Aristophanes Athenian Athens authority beauty believe Belize Black Sea called cause Central America character Christian Church comedy common doctrine doubt England English Europe fact faith favour feeling Florence France French garden give Government Greek Greytown Grote Guizot honour Jowett King labour language less letter living Livy London Lord means Menander ment mind minister Montalembert moral Mosquito nation nature never Nicaragua object once opinion painter Paris Parliament passed persons police political Pope possession present principle question racter Rauhe Haus reason religion religious remarkable rendered Roman Rome Ruskin Russia Savona Savonarola seems ship sion Southey taste things thought tion Tom Jones treaty true truth Turkey whole words writing