American Quarterly Review, Volume 21Carey, Lea & Carey, 1837 - Serial publications |
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Page 30
... Lord Byron brings to my recollection my exile in England , my walks to Harrow hill , and my travels to Venice and so of the rest . The book is com- posed of miscellanies which have all tones , because they relate to all things : they ...
... Lord Byron brings to my recollection my exile in England , my walks to Harrow hill , and my travels to Venice and so of the rest . The book is com- posed of miscellanies which have all tones , because they relate to all things : they ...
Page 59
... Lord Byron . It is one of the most amusing specimens of restless vanity we recollect ever to have encountered . He admires Byron much ; and is somewhat afraid that the admiration was not reciprocal . Lord Byron never mentioned or even ...
... Lord Byron . It is one of the most amusing specimens of restless vanity we recollect ever to have encountered . He admires Byron much ; and is somewhat afraid that the admiration was not reciprocal . Lord Byron never mentioned or even ...
Page 95
... Lord Byron ( p . 91 ) , Marshall's Washington ( p . 108 ) , and Gordon's History ( p . 126 ) , are , in point of singular infelicity , unlike any thing we ever met with . Ensign Fluellen had a much more appropriate collection of ...
... Lord Byron ( p . 91 ) , Marshall's Washington ( p . 108 ) , and Gordon's History ( p . 126 ) , are , in point of singular infelicity , unlike any thing we ever met with . Ensign Fluellen had a much more appropriate collection of ...
Page 110
... Lord Byron , and quotes a passage from the memoirs of the noble poet , to account for this disgusting appetite of his hero . Had he looked farther over the pages of the same volume he would have found an analogy of far more interest and ...
... Lord Byron , and quotes a passage from the memoirs of the noble poet , to account for this disgusting appetite of his hero . Had he looked farther over the pages of the same volume he would have found an analogy of far more interest and ...
Page 189
... Lord Byron's plays to the satisfaction of an audience , we believe , have failed . In four or five plain words , " they are not adapted to the stage , " which means neither more nor less than that they want several material elements ...
... Lord Byron's plays to the satisfaction of an audience , we believe , have failed . In four or five plain words , " they are not adapted to the stage , " which means neither more nor less than that they want several material elements ...
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admiration Adrastus agricultural Algiers American animal appears Bainbridge Ballymahon bark beautiful Bedouin called character Claude Frollo Colonel Burr colour command drama Edom effect England English Euripides excitement fame favour feelings fluid France French friends fruit gases genius give Goldsmith hand heart honour Huguenots human Idumea imagination insects interest Jefferson labour letter limbs literary live Lord Byron lottery matter ment mind Mirabeau moral nature never Northwest Company object observed OLIVER GOLDSMITH opera party pass passion pear perhaps person plant poet poetic poetry political possess present principle produce Quasimodo racter reader received regard remarks Robert le Diable scene sentiment Shakspeare ship society soil speak spirit taste thing thought tion tree truth United usury vessels virtue whole William Bainbridge writer XXI.-NO