The Quarterly ReviewWilliam Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) John Murray, 1833 |
From inside the book
Page 3
Unless the drama could have taken higher ground , - unless , from an
amusement it could have become a political power , — an engine by which one
of the conAlicting parties could strongly work upon the opinions of men , it could
not but ...
Unless the drama could have taken higher ground , - unless , from an
amusement it could have become a political power , — an engine by which one
of the conAlicting parties could strongly work upon the opinions of men , it could
not but ...
Page 9
... time his spirited stanzas on the recovery of the Earl of Strafford ' were written ;
whether they were inspired by gratitude for his patronage when in Ireland , or that
more general admiration of his character , prevalent among the royalist party .
... time his spirited stanzas on the recovery of the Earl of Strafford ' were written ;
whether they were inspired by gratitude for his patronage when in Ireland , or that
more general admiration of his character , prevalent among the royalist party .
Page 31
The difference , however , is of no great importance ; as all parties are agreed
that the Mémoires were not written by old Le ... but also because it may be
considered as expressing the sentiments of the party to which he belongs , and
which has ...
The difference , however , is of no great importance ; as all parties are agreed
that the Mémoires were not written by old Le ... but also because it may be
considered as expressing the sentiments of the party to which he belongs , and
which has ...
Page 32
These victims were all des hommes énergiques , mais que n ' avait jamais souillé
le crime , ' members of a society called the Jacobins , and of a party called the
Mountain . It is the object of the book to rescue these much - injured persons from
...
These victims were all des hommes énergiques , mais que n ' avait jamais souillé
le crime , ' members of a society called the Jacobins , and of a party called the
Mountain . It is the object of the book to rescue these much - injured persons from
...
Page 34
The character and situation of the Girondists at the opening of the National
Convention are depicted in the first chapter :• that celebrated party , which , with
excellent intentions and great talents , dragged us , ' says the author , towards ...
The character and situation of the Girondists at the opening of the National
Convention are depicted in the first chapter :• that celebrated party , which , with
excellent intentions and great talents , dragged us , ' says the author , towards ...
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Popular passages
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