The Quarterly Review, Volume 105William 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, 1859 |
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Page 4
... period runs thus : - ' Sir Thomas Cornwallis , what got ye for Calais ? Brome Hall , Brome Hall , as large as a palace . ' 6 His grandson was created a baronet in 1627 , and raised to the peerage for his loyalty , by the title of Baron ...
... period runs thus : - ' Sir Thomas Cornwallis , what got ye for Calais ? Brome Hall , Brome Hall , as large as a palace . ' 6 His grandson was created a baronet in 1627 , and raised to the peerage for his loyalty , by the title of Baron ...
Page 21
... period , male and female , and ( by a pardonable anachronism ) of some who were not strictly cotemporary ; the peers , ladies , and others not members of the House of Commons , being brought in as spectators . Taken as a whole , they ...
... period , male and female , and ( by a pardonable anachronism ) of some who were not strictly cotemporary ; the peers , ladies , and others not members of the House of Commons , being brought in as spectators . Taken as a whole , they ...
Page 32
... period ; and the Irish laws of duelling seemed framed for the express purpose of encouraging bullies and neutralising any incidental good which has been supposed to result from the practice . Any anxiety for an explanation or ...
... period ; and the Irish laws of duelling seemed framed for the express purpose of encouraging bullies and neutralising any incidental good which has been supposed to result from the practice . Any anxiety for an explanation or ...
Page 47
... period that we can per- ceive the true place and comparative greatness of Shakespeare . Indeed , the shifting influences exercised by the several nations of Europe upon each other are not less marked in their literature than in their ...
... period that we can per- ceive the true place and comparative greatness of Shakespeare . Indeed , the shifting influences exercised by the several nations of Europe upon each other are not less marked in their literature than in their ...
Page 60
... period when it was written or the matter upon which it was founded . The plays then succeed each other in the order of the folio of 1623 , beginning therefore with the ' Tempest . ' " Familiar as are the names of Warburton , Johnson ...
... period when it was written or the matter upon which it was founded . The plays then succeed each other in the order of the folio of 1623 , beginning therefore with the ' Tempest . ' " Familiar as are the names of Warburton , Johnson ...
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