The Quarterly Review, Volume 238William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) John Murray, 1922 |
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Page 32
... natural difficulty of applying critical principles to a dead artist is slight in comparison with that which arises when the subject is a contemporary . Those principles themselves are so variable and variously cherished , and the ...
... natural difficulty of applying critical principles to a dead artist is slight in comparison with that which arises when the subject is a contemporary . Those principles themselves are so variable and variously cherished , and the ...
Page 34
... natural as the growth of a hawthorn ; but that it was not thwarted in the years between the first and second books is proved by the beauty of ' The Children of Stare ' and other preludes to the finer achievement of later lyrics ...
... natural as the growth of a hawthorn ; but that it was not thwarted in the years between the first and second books is proved by the beauty of ' The Children of Stare ' and other preludes to the finer achievement of later lyrics ...
Page 42
... natural cruelty of human hearts , the sadder cruelty of egoism , his choice of theme and his treatment of character would have made the new novel an exhaustive proof . But he did not want to prove any- thing , certainly not anything ...
... natural cruelty of human hearts , the sadder cruelty of egoism , his choice of theme and his treatment of character would have made the new novel an exhaustive proof . But he did not want to prove any- thing , certainly not anything ...
Page 56
... natural in a place of rapid growth due to immense and recently developed riches ; what is more likely to surprise strangers , especially those who look upon the Turkish race as one inept in business and of energies purely destructive ...
... natural in a place of rapid growth due to immense and recently developed riches ; what is more likely to surprise strangers , especially those who look upon the Turkish race as one inept in business and of energies purely destructive ...
Page 57
... natural petroleum . The kerosene , on the other hand , finds a market in the West ; and much of it is pumped across Transcaucasia to Batum through a pipe - line running parallel with the railway for more than 560 miles , a notable piece ...
... natural petroleum . The kerosene , on the other hand , finds a market in the West ; and much of it is pumped across Transcaucasia to Batum through a pipe - line running parallel with the railway for more than 560 miles , a notable piece ...
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