The Quarterly Review, Volume 212William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray IV, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1910 |
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Page 29
... Christian names of Mrs Chaworth - Musters . The writer goes on to declare that the thought of their separation is heart - breaking , and that Paolo and Francesca were more leniently treated in hell ; he insists that her reformation ...
... Christian names of Mrs Chaworth - Musters . The writer goes on to declare that the thought of their separation is heart - breaking , and that Paolo and Francesca were more leniently treated in hell ; he insists that her reformation ...
Page 60
... Christ , ' and adds the detail that he gave scarcer measure to the poor than to the rich , and dunned them more ruthlessly for payment . He was soon as wealthy as he desired to be ; but there was still lacking to him the dignity of a ...
... Christ , ' and adds the detail that he gave scarcer measure to the poor than to the rich , and dunned them more ruthlessly for payment . He was soon as wealthy as he desired to be ; but there was still lacking to him the dignity of a ...
Page 68
... Christ humbled his power in the world ; then Francis was sent by God to resist his lures and weaken his hold upon both Church and people . All three poems are explicit as to his place in God's plan ; and Jacopone has always been ...
... Christ humbled his power in the world ; then Francis was sent by God to resist his lures and weaken his hold upon both Church and people . All three poems are explicit as to his place in God's plan ; and Jacopone has always been ...
Page 71
... Christ , were his themes ; there was no more satire , no more morbid depreciation of life , of the senses , of the needs of ' Brother Body . ' He recog- nised that sight , touch , hearing , and tasting are gifts from above ; that the ...
... Christ , were his themes ; there was no more satire , no more morbid depreciation of life , of the senses , of the needs of ' Brother Body . ' He recog- nised that sight , touch , hearing , and tasting are gifts from above ; that the ...
Page 73
... Christian alike , fail to make their appeal , yet to any mind possessing an imagination capable of being kindled by the romance of history , Jerusalem offers a field of study unrivalled in its possibilities . Still the fact remains that ...
... Christian alike , fail to make their appeal , yet to any mind possessing an imagination capable of being kindled by the romance of history , Jerusalem offers a field of study unrivalled in its possibilities . Still the fact remains that ...
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