The Quarterly Review, 266. köide,527. numberJohn Murray, 1936 |
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Page 34
... politician ? Certain it is that he had very decided views on matters of moment in the State as well as in the Church , and no one who compares his account , say , of Simon de Montfort with those of Freeman and J. R. Green can doubt that ...
... politician ? Certain it is that he had very decided views on matters of moment in the State as well as in the Church , and no one who compares his account , say , of Simon de Montfort with those of Freeman and J. R. Green can doubt that ...
Page 36
... politician , was no orator in the oral sense . Macaulay was an orator both by voice and pen . Thanks to the incomparable brilliance of his oratory he lives , and will live , as an historian . Yet he was , perhaps , the most bitter ...
... politician , was no orator in the oral sense . Macaulay was an orator both by voice and pen . Thanks to the incomparable brilliance of his oratory he lives , and will live , as an historian . Yet he was , perhaps , the most bitter ...
Page 40
... politician . Not necessarily , of course , if the phrase be permitted , a ' practising politician . ' Mr George Trevelyan has never sat in Parliament , yet who that knows his admirable work can doubt that he is an ardent politician ...
... politician . Not necessarily , of course , if the phrase be permitted , a ' practising politician . ' Mr George Trevelyan has never sat in Parliament , yet who that knows his admirable work can doubt that he is an ardent politician ...
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