The Quarterly Review, Volume 16John Murray, 1817 - English literature |
From inside the book
Page 37
We have not noticed the particulars of the political tenets which Mr. Phillips has
professed , or now professes ; bad as they may be , they can do no harm till his
style shall become more intelligible and bis character less ambiguous . Art . III .
We have not noticed the particulars of the political tenets which Mr. Phillips has
professed , or now professes ; bad as they may be , they can do no harm till his
style shall become more intelligible and bis character less ambiguous . Art . III .
Page 41
... the subject for bis prizes . The political uses of such an argument would have
embraced all the most interesting topics among those which may be called
fundamental in the constitution of civil society , objects which lie at the root of all
public ...
... the subject for bis prizes . The political uses of such an argument would have
embraced all the most interesting topics among those which may be called
fundamental in the constitution of civil society , objects which lie at the root of all
public ...
Page 67
Upon the supreme dominion which should always be preserved by sound morals
and religion over these departments of political inquiry , the sentiments of Mr.
Sumner are extremely creditable to him as a divine and as a philosopher .
Upon the supreme dominion which should always be preserved by sound morals
and religion over these departments of political inquiry , the sentiments of Mr.
Sumner are extremely creditable to him as a divine and as a philosopher .
Page 192
We would willingly avoid mention of the political opinions hinted at by Childe
Harold , and more distinctly expressed in other poems of Lord Byron ; —the more
willingly , as we strongly suspect that these effusions are rather the sport of whim
...
We would willingly avoid mention of the political opinions hinted at by Childe
Harold , and more distinctly expressed in other poems of Lord Byron ; —the more
willingly , as we strongly suspect that these effusions are rather the sport of whim
...
Page 531
the founder of that school of writers , wlio , setting truth at defiance , impose the
most audacious misrepresentations upon a credulous public , and seasoning
sophistry with slander , carry into literary and political disquisition a spirit of
personal ...
the founder of that school of writers , wlio , setting truth at defiance , impose the
most audacious misrepresentations upon a credulous public , and seasoning
sophistry with slander , carry into literary and political disquisition a spirit of
personal ...
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