The Quarterly Review, 260. köideWilliam 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, 1933 |
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Page 36
... critics in their place by asserting that they are of no use unless they reverse their usual practice . The business of the critic is , he says , to discover and record values . Hitherto all criticism , from Aristotle onwards , has dealt ...
... critics in their place by asserting that they are of no use unless they reverse their usual practice . The business of the critic is , he says , to discover and record values . Hitherto all criticism , from Aristotle onwards , has dealt ...
Page 255
... criticism ? Nearly two hundred years ago Oliver Goldsmith satirised its prevailing tendencies by the statement that it consisted first in saying that a picture would be better if the artist had taken more pains , and second in praising ...
... criticism ? Nearly two hundred years ago Oliver Goldsmith satirised its prevailing tendencies by the statement that it consisted first in saying that a picture would be better if the artist had taken more pains , and second in praising ...
Page 309
... criticism , and to maintain the faith and worship of the Church , was the realisation that there was not only the Book to rely on , but at the back of it the Church which had given men the Book and handed it down through all the ages ...
... criticism , and to maintain the faith and worship of the Church , was the realisation that there was not only the Book to rely on , but at the back of it the Church which had given men the Book and handed it down through all the ages ...
Contents
the Naval Aspect | 7 |
Lord Oxford and Asquith | 16 |
Indian and Otherwise | 31 |
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