Quarterly Review, Volumes 106-107J. Murray., 1859 |
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Page
... mind , 61 . 61-66 . literary , history and peculiarities of , Blazon of English counties , clownish , 114 . Blunt's , Professor , Undesigned Coincidences , ' 206 . Boswell's ' Life of Johnson , reasons of the interest attached to , 65 ...
... mind , 61 . 61-66 . literary , history and peculiarities of , Blazon of English counties , clownish , 114 . Blunt's , Professor , Undesigned Coincidences , ' 206 . Boswell's ' Life of Johnson , reasons of the interest attached to , 65 ...
Page 2
... mind of man . Even if Savonarola had escaped the martyr stake , to which he was devoted by Alexander VI . ( Savonarola and Alexander VI . !! ) , it would have been left for Luther and the English Reformers to reinstate the primitive ...
... mind of man . Even if Savonarola had escaped the martyr stake , to which he was devoted by Alexander VI . ( Savonarola and Alexander VI . !! ) , it would have been left for Luther and the English Reformers to reinstate the primitive ...
Page 6
... minds . William Hermann of Gouda , with whom he entered into active correspondence , indulged in Latin verse - making ... mind of Eras- mus . He sent for his guardians ; he entreated to be released ; he appealed to the better feelings of ...
... minds . William Hermann of Gouda , with whom he entered into active correspondence , indulged in Latin verse - making ... mind of Eras- mus . He sent for his guardians ; he entreated to be released ; he appealed to the better feelings of ...
Page 10
... mind of Erasmus , as he poured it forth in a dissertation added to his Adaiga ' ( printed at Venice during the next year ) , will hereafter demand our attention . On the more restless and turbu- lent mind of another reformer , himself ...
... mind of Erasmus , as he poured it forth in a dissertation added to his Adaiga ' ( printed at Venice during the next year ) , will hereafter demand our attention . On the more restless and turbu- lent mind of another reformer , himself ...
Page 19
... mind that much of the classical allusion , which to us is trite and pedantic , was then fresh and original . The inartificialness and , in- deed , the inconsistency of the structure of the satire might almost pass for consum- mate art ...
... mind that much of the classical allusion , which to us is trite and pedantic , was then fresh and original . The inartificialness and , in- deed , the inconsistency of the structure of the satire might almost pass for consum- mate art ...
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