quite like the French academy, — a sovereign organ of the highest literary opinion, a recognized authority in matters of intellectual tone and taste, we shall hardly have, and perhaps we ought not to wish to have it." Science - Page 99edited by - 1885Full view - About this book
| Matthew Arnold - 1865 - 570 pages
...perhaps, such philological freaks as Mr. Forster's about the one primeval language. But an academy quite like the French Academy, a sovereign organ of...have, and perhaps we ought not to wish to have it. But then every one amongst us with any turn for literature will do well to remember to what shortcomings... | |
| Matthew Arnold - 1865 - 334 pages
...perhaps, such philological freaks as Mr. Forster's about the one primeval language. But an academy quite like the French Academy, a sovereign organ of the highest literary opinion, a recognised authority in matters of intellectual tone and taste, we shall hardly have, and perhaps we... | |
| Matthew Arnold - 1866 - 558 pages
...perhaps, such philological freaks as Mr. Forster's about the one primeval language. But an academy quite like the French Academy, a sovereign organ of...have, and perhaps we ought not to wish to have it. But then every one amongst us with any turn for literature will do well to remember to what shortcomings... | |
| Matthew Arnold - 1866 - 528 pages
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| Matthew Arnold (Dichter, England) - 1869 - 438 pages
...perhaps, such philological freaks as Mr. Forster's about the one primeval language. But an academy quite like the French Academy, a sovereign organ of the highest literary opinion, a recognised authority in matters of intellectual tone and taste, we shall hardly have, and perhaps we... | |
| 1880 - 606 pages
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| 1880 - 612 pages
...ting of the old ideal kind would meet with a ready market m Üie covrnXra 80 The Progress of Taste. highest literary opinion, a recognized authority in...have, and perhaps we ought not to wish to have it.' So the moral is : ' Let every man be his own Academy.' Again, after a lecture full of the severest... | |
| Matthew Arnold - 1880 - 354 pages
...perhaps, such philological freaks as Mr. Forster's about the one primeval language. But an academy quite like the French Academy, a sovereign organ of the highest literary opinion, a recognised authority in matters of intellectual tone and taste, we shall hardly have, and perhaps we... | |
| Matthew Arnold - 1883 - 404 pages
...perhaps, such philological freaks as Mr. Forster's about the one primeval language. But an academy quite like the French Academy, a sovereign organ of the highest literary opinion, a recognised authority in matters of intellectual tone and taste, we shall hardly have, and perhaps we... | |
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