The Edinburgh Review: Or Critical Journal, Volume 193A. Constable, 1901 |
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Page 22
... remained President and responsible , and Buchanan , sym- pathising with the South , shrank from extreme measures of coercion . Even when Lincoln assumed the reins of office . -in March 1861 - time was necessarily required both for ...
... remained President and responsible , and Buchanan , sym- pathising with the South , shrank from extreme measures of coercion . Even when Lincoln assumed the reins of office . -in March 1861 - time was necessarily required both for ...
Page 23
... remained engraved in the hearts of the people . Yet it must be admitted that the differences which thus existed could not be settled by an appeal to the Constitution . Whether , ' writes Mr. Goldwin Smith , the Constitution was a ...
... remained engraved in the hearts of the people . Yet it must be admitted that the differences which thus existed could not be settled by an appeal to the Constitution . Whether , ' writes Mr. Goldwin Smith , the Constitution was a ...
Page 40
... remained a matter for the individual con- science . What one age or one man accepted as the ideal of natural beauty was controverted by another , repudiated by a third ; there was no international code to formulate its laws . The Dutch ...
... remained a matter for the individual con- science . What one age or one man accepted as the ideal of natural beauty was controverted by another , repudiated by a third ; there was no international code to formulate its laws . The Dutch ...
Page 43
... remained substantially the same . It was a landscape belonging to that division of imaginative invention which at its highest water - mark is fanciful rather than ideal , and at its lowest preludes and an- ticipates the apotheosis of ...
... remained substantially the same . It was a landscape belonging to that division of imaginative invention which at its highest water - mark is fanciful rather than ideal , and at its lowest preludes and an- ticipates the apotheosis of ...
Page 47
... remained to the end the tragic spectator of all that riot of grace and glamour , of gaiety and frivolity , of the pleasure , the sweetness , the folly and the license of which his works are the incarnate , the glorified , and the ...
... remained to the end the tragic spectator of all that riot of grace and glamour , of gaiety and frivolity , of the pleasure , the sweetness , the folly and the license of which his works are the incarnate , the glorified , and the ...
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Popular passages
Page 371 - Tis less than to be born ; a lasting sleep, A quiet resting from all jealousy ; A thing we all pursue. I know, besides, , It is but giving over of a game That must be lost Phi.
Page 112 - You must get men of a spirit, and take it not ill what I say — I know you will not — of a spirit that is likely to go on as far as gentlemen will go, or else you will be beaten still.
Page 226 - I have heard her dispute with all sorts of people, on all sorts of subjects, and never knew her in the wrong. She humbles the learned, sets right their disciples, and finds conversation for everybody.
Page 106 - CROMWELL, our chief of men, who through a cloud Not of war only, but detractions rude, Guided by faith and matchless fortitude, To peace and truth thy glorious way hast ploughed...
Page 131 - It is time for us to regard him as he really was, with all his physical and moral audacity, with all his tenderness and spiritual yearnings, in the world of action what Shakespeare was in the world of thought, the greatest because the most typical Englishman of all time.
Page 113 - Sir, the State, in choosing men to serve it, takes no notice of their opinions ; if they be willing faithfully to serve it, — that satisfies.
Page 126 - The mind is the man. If that be kept pure, a man signifies somewhat; if not, I would very fain see what difference there is betwixt him and a beast He hath only some activity to do some more mischief.
Page 3 - We cannot allow the colonies to check, or discourage in any degree, a traffic so beneficial to the nation.
Page 17 - WE cross the prairie as of old The pilgrims crossed the sea, To make the West, as they the East, The homestead of the free...
Page 128 - You have accounted yourselves happy in being environed with a great Ditch from all the world beside. Truly you will not be able to keep your Ditch, nor your Shipping, — unless you turn your Ships and Shipping into Troops of Horse and Companies of Foot ; and fight to defend yourselves on terra firma ! — And these things stated, liberavi animam meam ; and if there be " no danger" in ' all