The Quarterly Review, 220. köideWilliam Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, John Murray, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1914 |
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Page 46
... authority , as if he had been a religious philosopher or theological professor like Origen and Thomas Aquinas . The name of the apostle came to be associated with angular and frigid disquisitions which were rapidly losing their ...
... authority , as if he had been a religious philosopher or theological professor like Origen and Thomas Aquinas . The name of the apostle came to be associated with angular and frigid disquisitions which were rapidly losing their ...
Page 97
... authority and to preserve their followers from adopting English customs . Fynes Moryson ( ' Itinerary , ' iii , 160 ) showed that ' plenty of grass makes the Irish have infinite multitudes of cattle , and in the heat of the last ...
... authority and to preserve their followers from adopting English customs . Fynes Moryson ( ' Itinerary , ' iii , 160 ) showed that ' plenty of grass makes the Irish have infinite multitudes of cattle , and in the heat of the last ...
Page 104
... authority of James II . The rebellion of 1689 was racial , for the moving cause was the opposition between the men of Ulster and those of the rest of Ireland . It is a mere accident that the boundaries of race coincided with those of ...
... authority of James II . The rebellion of 1689 was racial , for the moving cause was the opposition between the men of Ulster and those of the rest of Ireland . It is a mere accident that the boundaries of race coincided with those of ...
Page 108
... authorities watched with jealousy the practical methods by which the Presbyterians extended their influence . William King points out that the arts by which they keep up their party are to take no apprentices that will not engage to go ...
... authorities watched with jealousy the practical methods by which the Presbyterians extended their influence . William King points out that the arts by which they keep up their party are to take no apprentices that will not engage to go ...
Page 110
... authorities , all practising in the law courts , and all acting in any town council , were obliged to attend the Holy Communion service of the Church of Ireland . A Presbyterian could not serve in the militia when a Jacobite invasion ...
... authorities , all practising in the law courts , and all acting in any town council , were obliged to attend the Holy Communion service of the Church of Ireland . A Presbyterian could not serve in the militia when a Jacobite invasion ...
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Popular passages
Page 402 - Too poor for a bribe, and too proud to importune, He had not the method of making a fortune : Could love and could hate, so was thought somewhat odd ; No very great wit ;— he believed in a God. A post or a pension he did not desire, But left Church and State to Charles Townshend and Squire.
Page 405 - I have been reading Gray's Works, and think him the only poet since Shakspeare entitled to the character of sublime. Perhaps you will remember that I once had a different opinion of him. I was prejudiced. He did not belong to our Thursday society, and was an Eton man, which lowered him prodigiously in our esteem. I once thought Swift's Letters the best that could be written ; but I like Gray's better. His humour, or his wit, or whatever it is to be called, is never ill-natured or offensive, and yet,...
Page 279 - It was against the recital of an act of Parliament, rather than against any suffering under its enactments, that they took up arms. They went to war against a preamble. They fought seven years against a declaration. They poured out their treasures and their blood like water, in a contest...
Page 152 - It drives one almost to despair of English literature when one sees so extraordinary a study of English life as Butler's posthumous Way of all Flesh making so little impression...
Page 421 - I find myself able to write a Catalogue, or to read the Peerage book, or Miller's Gardening Dictionary, and am thankful that there are such employments and such authors in the world. Some people, who hold me cheap for this, are doing perhaps what is not half so well worth while.
Page 160 - Above all things let no unwary reader do me the injustice of believing in me. In that I write at all I am among the damned. If he must believe in anything, let him believe in the music of Handel, the painting of Giovanni Bellini, and in the thirteenth chapter of St. Paul's First Epistle to the Corinthians.
Page 159 - Grace ! the old Pagan ideal whose charm even unlovely Paul could not withstand, but, as the legend tells us, his soul fainted within him, his heart misgave him, and, standing alone on the seashore at dusk, he " troubled deaf heaven with his bootless cries," his thin voice pleading for grace after the flesh. The waves came in one after another, the sea-gulls cried together after their kind, the wind rustled among the dried canes upon the sandbanks, and there came a voice from heaven saying, " Let...
Page 485 - Finland adopted the single gold standard in 1877, and in 1878 Austria-Hungary abolished the free coinage of silver.
Page 321 - I am very unhappy about the growing illwill between France and England which exists on both sides of the Channel. It is not that I suppose that France has any deliberate intention of going to war with us. But the two nations come into contact in every part of the globe. In every part of it questions arise which, in the present state of feeling, excite mutual suspicion and irritation.