The Edinburgh Review: Or Critical Journal, Volume 211A. Constable, 1910 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 56
Page 92
... period , not only because he was the most affluent genius of the era , but also because he accepted the classical ... period that Molière represents , not its excesses or its weaknesses . He avoids the stately artificiality which is the ...
... period , not only because he was the most affluent genius of the era , but also because he accepted the classical ... period that Molière represents , not its excesses or its weaknesses . He avoids the stately artificiality which is the ...
Page 385
... period in Germany . By entering successively into the mind of each period , regarding nature through the experience of the past , modern art tastes of a variety of emotions and expresses each with a note of reminiscence or discovery ...
... period in Germany . By entering successively into the mind of each period , regarding nature through the experience of the past , modern art tastes of a variety of emotions and expresses each with a note of reminiscence or discovery ...
Page 462
... period , in which the first great Cretan civilisation flourished ; in his Second Middle - Minoan period the older palaces were destroyed after an existence of about three hundred years , the twelfth dynasty then reigning in Egypt ...
... period , in which the first great Cretan civilisation flourished ; in his Second Middle - Minoan period the older palaces were destroyed after an existence of about three hundred years , the twelfth dynasty then reigning in Egypt ...
Contents
1 Industrial Efficiency A comparative study | 1 |
Golden Age By E L S Horsburgh B | 35 |
Holland Sweden Denmark | 62 |
14 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
action appears artist authority beauty Berlin Bill British Budget Canal Caroline Norton carried CCCCXXXII CCXI century Chamber character civilisation Company Constitution Court Cretan Crete decorative demand desire Edgar Allan Poe effect Egypt Egyptian electors emotion England English existence expression fact favour France French friends give Gournia Government Holmes House of Commons House of Lords human industrial influence interest king Knossos labour land legislation less letter live London Lord Melbourne Lorenzo majority Mary Mary Wollstonecraft ment mind Minister Ministry Minoan modern Molière Molière's moral nation nature never Nile object Ollivier Parliament party Peers perhaps Phaestos Pitt Poe's political Poliziano practical present principle proposed Prussia question railways recognised Referendum reflecting telescope reform regard Revolution social Tartuffe telescope theory tion to-day trade vote wages waterways Whig whole writer