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 2
... fact that as Hobhouse rose to the top of the school he was allowed to be present at some of the small literary suppers which Dr Estlin was in the habit of giving , has enabled him to tell one or two of the earliest among the many good ...
... fact that as Hobhouse rose to the top of the school he was allowed to be present at some of the small literary suppers which Dr Estlin was in the habit of giving , has enabled him to tell one or two of the earliest among the many good ...
Page 5
... fact which Hobhouse thus characteristically notifies : ' July 17. Arrived at the port of Zea . Went on board with Lord Byron and his suite . Took leave , non sine lacrymis , of this singular young person , on a little stone terrace at ...
... fact which Hobhouse thus characteristically notifies : ' July 17. Arrived at the port of Zea . Went on board with Lord Byron and his suite . Took leave , non sine lacrymis , of this singular young person , on a little stone terrace at ...
Page 7
... fact that Herschel's telescope had shown him stars whose light has been two millions of years reaching earth , and from this alone he accepts the unimportance of man . · In 1813 travel - hunger once more overcame him . Byron , with whom ...
... fact that Herschel's telescope had shown him stars whose light has been two millions of years reaching earth , and from this alone he accepts the unimportance of man . · In 1813 travel - hunger once more overcame him . Byron , with whom ...
Page 9
... fact all the way from Frankfort to Holland he was in the thick of the details of contemporary history , always of the most stirring , too often of the most terrible kind . But though he does full justice to the more serious elements in ...
... fact all the way from Frankfort to Holland he was in the thick of the details of contemporary history , always of the most stirring , too often of the most terrible kind . But though he does full justice to the more serious elements in ...
Page 27
... fact that their episode of criminality was over , and that her secret was safe . Also the well - known stanzas beginning : ' I speak not , I trace not , I breathe not thy name- There is grief in the sound , there is guilt in the fame ...
... fact that their episode of criminality was over , and that her secret was safe . Also the well - known stanzas beginning : ' I speak not , I trace not , I breathe not thy name- There is grief in the sound , there is guilt in the fame ...
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