The Quarterly Review, Volume 139William 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, 1875 |
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Page 8
... language of Bacon concerning James , his purposes and achievements , is not at all the language adopted later on by English historians , and to which we have grown accustomed . Since Bacon had thoughts of being to James what Burleigh ...
... language of Bacon concerning James , his purposes and achievements , is not at all the language adopted later on by English historians , and to which we have grown accustomed . Since Bacon had thoughts of being to James what Burleigh ...
Page 20
... language has the jealousy between the two nations found for itself such vehement expression . James's migration into England had been followed , as might be looked for , by a large increase in the petty outbreaks and disturbances of the ...
... language has the jealousy between the two nations found for itself such vehement expression . James's migration into England had been followed , as might be looked for , by a large increase in the petty outbreaks and disturbances of the ...
Page 22
... languages of Spain , France , and Italy ; a renewed impulse was given to the life of male and female conventual societies ; the Benedictines of St. Maur started on their scholarly labours ; the courtly eloquence of the French pulpit ...
... languages of Spain , France , and Italy ; a renewed impulse was given to the life of male and female conventual societies ; the Benedictines of St. Maur started on their scholarly labours ; the courtly eloquence of the French pulpit ...
Page 24
... languages , whose reading in divinity and criticism , whose powers as a conversationalist , whose intimate acquaintance with the classics , he celebrates . Casaubon was far removed from being an indiscriminate flatterer , and he is ...
... languages , whose reading in divinity and criticism , whose powers as a conversationalist , whose intimate acquaintance with the classics , he celebrates . Casaubon was far removed from being an indiscriminate flatterer , and he is ...
Page 144
... language , even into the Spanish , from whence it derived its existence , as a large proportion of French literature did at that time . But when a true poet borrows ideas , he does not reproduce them in their own semblance , he ...
... language , even into the Spanish , from whence it derived its existence , as a large proportion of French literature did at that time . But when a true poet borrows ideas , he does not reproduce them in their own semblance , he ...
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