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 - English literature |
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Page 34
... reasons . In the first place , the digression illustrates the palpable fact that the notes of the original impressions are carefully revised and written up to date . ' In the second place , it exemplifies Freytag's tendency to speak ...
... reasons . In the first place , the digression illustrates the palpable fact that the notes of the original impressions are carefully revised and written up to date . ' In the second place , it exemplifies Freytag's tendency to speak ...
Page 43
... reasons to the last . Yet this argument is selected by Freytag as the sole ground which existed in the Crown Prince's mind for his advocacy of the Empire . We have already tested the worth of Freytag's recollections of the Prince's ...
... reasons to the last . Yet this argument is selected by Freytag as the sole ground which existed in the Crown Prince's mind for his advocacy of the Empire . We have already tested the worth of Freytag's recollections of the Prince's ...
Page 46
... reasons are obvious . The internal policy of the Empire , repres- sive and reactionary as it was , met with his strong disapproval . He regarded it as in the highest degree injurious to the free development of German national life . He ...
... reasons are obvious . The internal policy of the Empire , repres- sive and reactionary as it was , met with his strong disapproval . He regarded it as in the highest degree injurious to the free development of German national life . He ...
Page 49
... reason that he implicitly relied upon the chief of his staff , while he himself willingly accepted the responsibility and display which necessarily pertain to the royal dignity . In fact , if any one said that the Emperor Frederick ...
... reason that he implicitly relied upon the chief of his staff , while he himself willingly accepted the responsibility and display which necessarily pertain to the royal dignity . In fact , if any one said that the Emperor Frederick ...
Page 62
... of mountainous oppression under which the spirit labours as one by one the powers of reason , love , and • * Melmoth Réconcilié . ' beauty , beauty , are materialized at our magician's touch . He 62 Realism and Decadence in French Fiction .
... of mountainous oppression under which the spirit labours as one by one the powers of reason , love , and • * Melmoth Réconcilié . ' beauty , beauty , are materialized at our magician's touch . He 62 Realism and Decadence in French Fiction .
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