The Quarterly Review, Volumes 107-108John Murray, 1860 |
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Page 22
... Muretus . Muretus , when a youth , had been a great favourite with Julius Scaliger ; had visited at his house at Agen , and used to call him Father . ' He had afterwards alienated Joseph by passing off upon him some Latin lines of his ...
... Muretus . Muretus , when a youth , had been a great favourite with Julius Scaliger ; had visited at his house at Agen , and used to call him Father . ' He had afterwards alienated Joseph by passing off upon him some Latin lines of his ...
Page 23
... Muretus did not mean anything upon by appearances : The Italians are a by it , and would have been as ready to write set of atheists , ' was the exaggerated phrase on the other side had he been retained on it . in which he utters the ...
... Muretus did not mean anything upon by appearances : The Italians are a by it , and would have been as ready to write set of atheists , ' was the exaggerated phrase on the other side had he been retained on it . in which he utters the ...
Page 27
... prevents Welser from knowing more than he does . ' A mere antiquary like Sigonio , Latinists like Lipsius or Muretus , textual critics and collators of MSS , might be either Catholic or Protestant , |. 1860 . 27 Joseph Scaliger . ...
... prevents Welser from knowing more than he does . ' A mere antiquary like Sigonio , Latinists like Lipsius or Muretus , textual critics and collators of MSS , might be either Catholic or Protestant , |. 1860 . 27 Joseph Scaliger . ...
Page 29
... Muretus , or those of Petrus Victorius , con- tain little else but trifling remarks , or the common anecdotes repeated from Plutarch or Suetonius , betraying the poverty of the land and making us aware that the Italian man could not get ...
... Muretus , or those of Petrus Victorius , con- tain little else but trifling remarks , or the common anecdotes repeated from Plutarch or Suetonius , betraying the poverty of the land and making us aware that the Italian man could not get ...
Page 40
... Muretus and Lipsius were carried over in triumph . Of Casaubon they had strong hopes . But Scaliger ? He was known to be as immovable in his Protes- tant faith , as he was invincible in the field of criticism and knowledge of antiquity ...
... Muretus and Lipsius were carried over in triumph . Of Casaubon they had strong hopes . But Scaliger ? He was known to be as immovable in his Protes- tant faith , as he was invincible in the field of criticism and knowledge of antiquity ...
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Common terms and phrases
admirable animal appears Australia better Bill boroughs Brazil British British Kaffraria century character Châteaubriand Church colony common cottage Cowper deaconesses districts doubt Duke England English existence fact favour feel France franchise give gold Hadrian hand honour horse hounds House of Commons important improved increased Kaffir Kaiserswerth labour lady Lancashire land Leslie less living London Lord Lord Elgin Lord John Russell Madame Madame Récamier manufacturing means ment mind moral Muretus nature never nurse object once opinion party passed period persons political poor population possessed present province racter Récamier Reform religious remarkable result rider Roman savings-bank says Scaliger Scheffer seems sick Sir Robert Peel society South spirit Stonehenge success things thought Tientsin tion Tom Smith town truth Vallum wall whole women