The National Review, Volume 10W.H. Allen, 1887 - English literature |
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Page 2
... words , his postulate was the creation of a responsible and powerful Irish Executive , an arrangement to which Sir George appeared last year to entertain an extreme repugnance . But whatever may be the value of this concession , it is ...
... words , his postulate was the creation of a responsible and powerful Irish Executive , an arrangement to which Sir George appeared last year to entertain an extreme repugnance . But whatever may be the value of this concession , it is ...
Page 6
... words , the utterance at Swansea was certainly very copious , but the sum and substance of its meaning amounted only to this , that Mr. Gladstone's mind was open upon the question , and clear of fore- gone conclusions , that it was a ...
... words , the utterance at Swansea was certainly very copious , but the sum and substance of its meaning amounted only to this , that Mr. Gladstone's mind was open upon the question , and clear of fore- gone conclusions , that it was a ...
Page 11
... words ; he never offends the taste of the reader by making the beauties of the poet an oppor- tunity for the display of his own rhetoric . He admires enthusi- astically , and yet with a discretion that keeps his enthusiasm from running ...
... words ; he never offends the taste of the reader by making the beauties of the poet an oppor- tunity for the display of his own rhetoric . He admires enthusi- astically , and yet with a discretion that keeps his enthusiasm from running ...
Page 14
... words , the subject - matter , compared with what is contributed by the imagination of the poet . It is a commonplace of criticism , for instance , that the various . heroes of Byron , though their action is quite intelligible , and in ...
... words , the subject - matter , compared with what is contributed by the imagination of the poet . It is a commonplace of criticism , for instance , that the various . heroes of Byron , though their action is quite intelligible , and in ...
Page 15
... word I ever utter can be taken for granted as an opinion growing out of my identical nature . I confess that this ... words no moral sense ) , that , for instance , we cannot divine from the Iliad what Homer loved or loathed , or from ...
... word I ever utter can be taken for granted as an opinion growing out of my identical nature . I confess that this ... words no moral sense ) , that , for instance , we cannot divine from the Iliad what Homer loved or loathed , or from ...
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