The British Quarterly Review, Band 38Henry Allon Hodder and Stoughton, 1863 |
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Seite 11
... produce at intervals various papers , not so much characterized by lasting value as by the accuracy and almost quaintness of their occa- sional lore , by extreme precision of style , frequently losing itself , however , in a plenitude ...
... produce at intervals various papers , not so much characterized by lasting value as by the accuracy and almost quaintness of their occa- sional lore , by extreme precision of style , frequently losing itself , however , in a plenitude ...
Seite 15
... produced studies ' rather than works ; and we feel the same kind of sorrowful dissatisfaction as we contemplate these volumes as we might feel had the genius and consummate skill of a Landseer exhibited themselves in studies of dogs ...
... produced studies ' rather than works ; and we feel the same kind of sorrowful dissatisfaction as we contemplate these volumes as we might feel had the genius and consummate skill of a Landseer exhibited themselves in studies of dogs ...
Seite 20
... produced those papers on the ' English Mail Coach , ' or on ' Murder Considered as One of the Fine Arts ; ' yet it is equally true that no man uniting a sound body to a sound mind could have produced them . How elaborately he delays the ...
... produced those papers on the ' English Mail Coach , ' or on ' Murder Considered as One of the Fine Arts ; ' yet it is equally true that no man uniting a sound body to a sound mind could have produced them . How elaborately he delays the ...
Seite 26
... produced , for example , the beginning of the final preface to the article on Lord Carlisle's lecture , or the first few pages of the article itself ? And there are dozens of other passages equally vain , equally puerile , equally fit ...
... produced , for example , the beginning of the final preface to the article on Lord Carlisle's lecture , or the first few pages of the article itself ? And there are dozens of other passages equally vain , equally puerile , equally fit ...
Seite 27
... produced an utter confusion of the moral judgment and took away from him all moral earnestness . A man with a task and purpose before him , and who when he had found a thing to do did it with his might , was inexplicable to De Quincey ...
... produced an utter confusion of the moral judgment and took away from him all moral earnestness . A man with a task and purpose before him , and who when he had found a thing to do did it with his might , was inexplicable to De Quincey ...
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