The Quarterly Review, Volume 171William 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, 1890 |
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Page 18
... living only a few years ago , who recollected him as ' a very gentlemanlike young man , ' who could be ' kind ' to younger boys , i.e. ask them to breakfast . Shelley had a friendly remembrance of Eton . He mentions his rural joys in ...
... living only a few years ago , who recollected him as ' a very gentlemanlike young man , ' who could be ' kind ' to younger boys , i.e. ask them to breakfast . Shelley had a friendly remembrance of Eton . He mentions his rural joys in ...
Page 19
... living to whose senses of sight , sound , and , we may add , touch , the word Keate has a perfectly vivid and individual meaning . We try to call him Dr. Keate , but we cannot frame our lips to pronounce it . ' Dr. Arnold and ' Dr ...
... living to whose senses of sight , sound , and , we may add , touch , the word Keate has a perfectly vivid and individual meaning . We try to call him Dr. Keate , but we cannot frame our lips to pronounce it . ' Dr. Arnold and ' Dr ...
Page 33
... living for many flattering marks of their gracious favour . ' This rapid sketch of Freytag's career before 1870 explains why he was invited by the Crown Prince to accompany him in the impending campaign . Freytag joined the head ...
... living for many flattering marks of their gracious favour . ' This rapid sketch of Freytag's career before 1870 explains why he was invited by the Crown Prince to accompany him in the impending campaign . Freytag joined the head ...
Page 56
... his sense of justice , both to the dead and to the living . It would have been better for his reputation as a man , if he had never published these Reminiscences . ' ART . ART . III . * — 1 . H. de 56 The Emperor Frederick .
... his sense of justice , both to the dead and to the living . It would have been better for his reputation as a man , if he had never published these Reminiscences . ' ART . ART . III . * — 1 . H. de 56 The Emperor Frederick .
Page 59
... living whole , it is manifest that the author of ' Le Père Goriot ' and Illusions Perdues ' was no Romanticist . For to him Nature was a mere bundle of forces which might be pulled out and examined like so many nervous filaments . In ...
... living whole , it is manifest that the author of ' Le Père Goriot ' and Illusions Perdues ' was no Romanticist . For to him Nature was a mere bundle of forces which might be pulled out and examined like so many nervous filaments . In ...
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