The Quarterly Review, Volumes 237-238William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, John Murray, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1922 - English literature |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 82
Page 6
... acceptance and chase every rival from the field . C A canon of Shakespeare is imperatively needed . Until it is at least approximately known what parts of ' Titus Andronicus ' ( if any ) , Henry VI , ' Parts 1 , 2 , 3 , ' Pericles ...
... acceptance and chase every rival from the field . C A canon of Shakespeare is imperatively needed . Until it is at least approximately known what parts of ' Titus Andronicus ' ( if any ) , Henry VI , ' Parts 1 , 2 , 3 , ' Pericles ...
Page 39
... accepted as the frontier between Abyssinia and British Somaliland the line laid down in Menelik's letter of April 10 , 1891 , thus recognising both Harrar and the Ogaden country as within the Emperor's dominions . The more burning ...
... accepted as the frontier between Abyssinia and British Somaliland the line laid down in Menelik's letter of April 10 , 1891 , thus recognising both Harrar and the Ogaden country as within the Emperor's dominions . The more burning ...
Page 54
... accepted in their proper season and then passed out of them into what was for him th only real existence , the domain of literature and art The task of appraising him , therefore , although difficul because it demands observation of ...
... accepted in their proper season and then passed out of them into what was for him th only real existence , the domain of literature and art The task of appraising him , therefore , although difficul because it demands observation of ...
Page 86
... accepted history we are told , provide no clue ; and it is only by recog nition of the secret forces ' that we can possibly hope to understand ' the events with which she deals . 6 It is of course quite true that historians have chosen ...
... accepted history we are told , provide no clue ; and it is only by recog nition of the secret forces ' that we can possibly hope to understand ' the events with which she deals . 6 It is of course quite true that historians have chosen ...
Page 101
... accepted the judgment with pride ; and that he would have done so is indicative of his real weakness . When he adds that Byron's empire was over the imagination and the passions , he says more than justly can be put in for himself ...
... accepted the judgment with pride ; and that he would have done so is indicative of his real weakness . When he adds that Byron's empire was over the imagination and the passions , he says more than justly can be put in for himself ...
Contents
134 | |
155 | |
177 | |
199 | |
238 | |
256 | |
275 | |
298 | |
313 | |
333 | |
354 | |
378 | |
400 | |
415 | |
430 | |
145 | |
163 | |
180 | |
198 | |
213 | |
219 | |
235 | |
252 | |
265 | |
279 | |
314 | |
353 | |
361 | |
392 | |
404 | |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Adams Admiral agricultural American appear army Austin Austin Dobson Austria Baghdad Bismarck Boetticher Britain British Bryce Byron Cabinet cent century character colonies Comedy Comedy of Manners criticism cruisers David Henderson Dobson drama economic Egypt Egyptian Emperor Empire England English Entente fact favour fleet force foreign France French German Government hand Henley House industry interest Ireland Irish Italian Julian Corbett King Labour Lady Melbourne land leaders less letters Little Entente Lord Kitchener Lord Ripon matter Menelik ment Mesopotamia military mind Minister moral nature naval never opinion organised Parliament party peace play poems poet political position possible present Prince question realised recognised river Russia Salisbury seems Serbia Shakespeare ships Shoan Sinn Fein social Socialist submarines things tion Tirpitz Treaty United United Kingdom verse Webster West Indian whole writing