The Quarterly Review, Volume 265, Issue 526John Murray, 1935 |
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Page 335
... Professor Chambers does not attempt , as some have done in our time , to write off this book as a mere jeu d'esprit . He recognises its deep earnest and its far- reaching effects : but he insists ( more clearly , I think , than any ...
... Professor Chambers does not attempt , as some have done in our time , to write off this book as a mere jeu d'esprit . He recognises its deep earnest and its far- reaching effects : but he insists ( more clearly , I think , than any ...
Page 336
... Professor Chambers's analogy of Swift and the Houyhnhnms ? There , we are ashamed to see how much more decently non - human creatures might conceivably live than men and women did in Swift's own England ; and so does More shame ...
... Professor Chambers's analogy of Swift and the Houyhnhnms ? There , we are ashamed to see how much more decently non - human creatures might conceivably live than men and women did in Swift's own England ; and so does More shame ...
Page 340
... Professor Chambers regrets pathetically , again and again , that frustration and arrest which blights the fair promise of the early sixteenth century . ' But that promise was merely superficial ; for there was little sign of true inner ...
... Professor Chambers regrets pathetically , again and again , that frustration and arrest which blights the fair promise of the early sixteenth century . ' But that promise was merely superficial ; for there was little sign of true inner ...
Contents
THE THEORY OF COEDUCATION By Alice Woods | 199 |
THE BALANCE OF NATURE By Douglas Gordon | 209 |
ABOLITION OR REFORM? | 223 |
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