The National Review, Volume 10W.H. Allen, 1887 - English literature |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 45
Page 12
... considered it ought to come , as naturally as leaves to a tree ; and now that it came of a quality like this ( the poem of Isabella ) , he had fairly earned the right , which his rash youth had too soon arrogated , to look down on the ...
... considered it ought to come , as naturally as leaves to a tree ; and now that it came of a quality like this ( the poem of Isabella ) , he had fairly earned the right , which his rash youth had too soon arrogated , to look down on the ...
Page 71
... considered as having been used simply for oratorical effect , while others of them were , probably , used merely to excite public attention , and were considered justified on account of the great results hoped for , and confidently ...
... considered as having been used simply for oratorical effect , while others of them were , probably , used merely to excite public attention , and were considered justified on account of the great results hoped for , and confidently ...
Page 73
... considered as an apostle of free imports . His adherence to such a policy was , from the first , only conditional . If those conditions . have not been complied with , his admirers may well demand that justice shall be done him ; that ...
... considered as an apostle of free imports . His adherence to such a policy was , from the first , only conditional . If those conditions . have not been complied with , his admirers may well demand that justice shall be done him ; that ...
Page 78
... considered as deserving " the charac- ter of an imposter . " Again , if the nations of the world did not , " at no very distant period , " alter their tariffs and adopt a policy of free imports , it was to be understood that , so far as ...
... considered as deserving " the charac- ter of an imposter . " Again , if the nations of the world did not , " at no very distant period , " alter their tariffs and adopt a policy of free imports , it was to be understood that , so far as ...
Page 86
... considered , the piece has many weak points , its greatest weakness being the subject ; and yet it has no mean excellencies . A wholesome breath of pure air blows through it from beginning to end ; we feel ourselves thoroughly in ...
... considered , the piece has many weak points , its greatest weakness being the subject ; and yet it has no mean excellencies . A wholesome breath of pure air blows through it from beginning to end ; we feel ourselves thoroughly in ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
acres agricultural allotments Bill bishops British Bulgaria capital cause cent character Chimæra classes Cobden Club Colonies Committee Comte de Paris course Crown 8vo Donatello doubt duty effect employment England English existence fact farm favour feeling foreign France Free Trade French German give Gladstone Government Home Rule House House of Commons important increase industry interest Ireland Irish labour land landlords legislation less Liberal Liberal Unionists live Lizst London Lord Lord Salisbury manufactures means ment millions mind National Review nature never opinion Parliament Parnellites party persons poet poetry political poor population present Prince Prince Bismarck principle produce protective purchase question regard rent result Richard Jefferies Rule Russia scheme social tenants things tion town tzedakah Unionist United Kingdom whole women words