The Quarterly Review, Volumen19William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1819 |
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Página 1
... feelings of a generous and constitutional loyalty , and in the healthful princi- ples of the church establishment , not jaundiced by the bitter spirit . of political or puritanical discontent . He was happy also in the time in which he ...
... feelings of a generous and constitutional loyalty , and in the healthful princi- ples of the church establishment , not jaundiced by the bitter spirit . of political or puritanical discontent . He was happy also in the time in which he ...
Página 8
... feelings for nature Evelyn had not advanced beyond his contem- poraries in taste , and he was heartily pleased with the ... feeling , the disgusting sight of the galley - slaves at Mar- seilles , who , it seems , were made a show for the ...
... feelings for nature Evelyn had not advanced beyond his contem- poraries in taste , and he was heartily pleased with the ... feeling , the disgusting sight of the galley - slaves at Mar- seilles , who , it seems , were made a show for the ...
Página 11
... feeling for better things ; and when he got out of the trammels of art was fully capable of enjoying the world of nature . The following description will be read with pleasure , though it should remind the reader of a sublimer picture ...
... feeling for better things ; and when he got out of the trammels of art was fully capable of enjoying the world of nature . The following description will be read with pleasure , though it should remind the reader of a sublimer picture ...
Página 15
... feeling of good - will towards him , as one to whose family he was obliged , and whose worth he knew ; and ap- prehending no danger from him , would not willingly molest him for his loyalty . Without some such protection he would hardly ...
... feeling of good - will towards him , as one to whose family he was obliged , and whose worth he knew ; and ap- prehending no danger from him , would not willingly molest him for his loyalty . Without some such protection he would hardly ...
Página 22
... feelings always under the control of a cool and steady judgment , his predilec- tions would have led him to a vegetable diet , and he would have been the Mæcenas of his contemporary Thomas Tryon . The great modern example of this diet ...
... feelings always under the control of a cool and steady judgment , his predilec- tions would have led him to a vegetable diet , and he would have been the Mæcenas of his contemporary Thomas Tryon . The great modern example of this diet ...
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