The Quarterly Review, Volume 147 |
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Page 19
Bitter with the bitter- Vienna , and for four years a correspondence ness of gall and wormwood were the feel- went on , which is the record of the anxieings that overcame Lessing in the course of ties , the sufferings ...
Bitter with the bitter- Vienna , and for four years a correspondence ness of gall and wormwood were the feel- went on , which is the record of the anxieings that overcame Lessing in the course of ties , the sufferings ...
Page 41
It is perhaps not peculiar to condaily operation , without in the course of time troversial Aggressive Nonconformity , that destroying many of ( the privileges of peers . it commonly assumes in argument the whole You cannot have an ...
It is perhaps not peculiar to condaily operation , without in the course of time troversial Aggressive Nonconformity , that destroying many of ( the privileges of peers . it commonly assumes in argument the whole You cannot have an ...
Page 44
The course his identification of himself with his city of our national life has been violently arcarried him into injustice and excess , as rested by the antagonism of its two great in the case of the extermination of the Me- internal ...
The course his identification of himself with his city of our national life has been violently arcarried him into injustice and excess , as rested by the antagonism of its two great in the case of the extermination of the Me- internal ...
Page 45
It was of course open to him to sion from politics alone . derive his conception of the character of First , then , we may say with certainty England from a study of her political action . that ...
It was of course open to him to sion from politics alone . derive his conception of the character of First , then , we may say with certainty England from a study of her political action . that ...
Page 46
... of all imitations ; he will be education and the usual course of reading obliged to imitate himself , and to repeat what have made familiar and interesting to all Europe , without being degraded by the vul* State of English Poetry .
... of all imitations ; he will be education and the usual course of reading obliged to imitate himself , and to repeat what have made familiar and interesting to all Europe , without being degraded by the vul* State of English Poetry .
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