The Quarterly Review, Volume 291William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray IV, John Murray, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1953 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 67
Page 28
... feel not the slightest zeal for atheism in action or for Communism as such . Just as the average Englishman does not feel otherwise than friendly to the average Russian as a Russian , thus also the British conscious - Christian does not ...
... feel not the slightest zeal for atheism in action or for Communism as such . Just as the average Englishman does not feel otherwise than friendly to the average Russian as a Russian , thus also the British conscious - Christian does not ...
Page 350
... Feeling ' was to exert a considerable influence on certain subsequent kind of Scots literature and on the popular moral ideas of Scotland . Indeed , Mackenzie became so identified with the anonymous ' Man of Feeling ' that the title ...
... Feeling ' was to exert a considerable influence on certain subsequent kind of Scots literature and on the popular moral ideas of Scotland . Indeed , Mackenzie became so identified with the anonymous ' Man of Feeling ' that the title ...
Page 352
... feeling . In ' Shakespearean Tragedy ' Professor A. C. Bradley writes : ' Henry Mac- kenzie .. was , it would seem , the first of our critics to feel the " indescribable charm " of Hamlet , and to divine something of Shakespeare's ...
... feeling . In ' Shakespearean Tragedy ' Professor A. C. Bradley writes : ' Henry Mac- kenzie .. was , it would seem , the first of our critics to feel the " indescribable charm " of Hamlet , and to divine something of Shakespeare's ...
Contents
No 595JANUARY 1953 | 1 |
The Third Marquess of Salisbury as Empire Builder | 14 |
British Churches and Foreign Affairs Relations with Churches in CommunistControlled Countries | 28 |
63 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Africa army Australian authority become Bible Bolshevik Boswell Britain British called capital carrion crow century Chesterton Christian Church colonial Communism Communist courts defence Democratic divorce East Empire England English Eritrea estate corporations Ethiopia fact farm farmer father feel foreign forest France French German Government Governor-General Greek House human idea income increased India industry influence interest Irish Isaac Isaacs Johnson land less letters limited partnerships literary prophet living Lord Ashbourne Lord Salisbury Mackenzie means ment mind Minister modern moral never non-violence oratory organisation Pakistan Pandit Nehru party perhaps poet political present problem psychiatry reader realise religion Republic revolution rivers Roman Russian sense Shaw social Socialist society Soviet Soviet Union speech Spenser Stalin subconscious Sudan Tewkesbury thing tion to-day Tractarians words writing wrote