Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 31British Academy - Humanities |
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Page 45
... tion appeals to our senses , and , through them , to our imagina- tion . A well - cooked mutton - chop appeals to our senses but not , I fancy , to our imagination ; so , however agreeable to the palate , it cannot legitimately be ...
... tion appeals to our senses , and , through them , to our imagina- tion . A well - cooked mutton - chop appeals to our senses but not , I fancy , to our imagination ; so , however agreeable to the palate , it cannot legitimately be ...
Page 99
... tion and urged that it shall no more be thought ( as it is now , with ludicrous and vain selfishness ) an advantage for one nation to undersell another ; and take its occupation away from it ; but that the primal and eternal law of ...
... tion and urged that it shall no more be thought ( as it is now , with ludicrous and vain selfishness ) an advantage for one nation to undersell another ; and take its occupation away from it ; but that the primal and eternal law of ...
Page 117
... tion , trifling with unessentials , guessing at the unattainable . If a quarter of the learned labour that has been thus spent had been co - ordinated and directed to the only object within the power of scholarship to reach , the ...
... tion , trifling with unessentials , guessing at the unattainable . If a quarter of the learned labour that has been thus spent had been co - ordinated and directed to the only object within the power of scholarship to reach , the ...
Contents
LIST OF FELLOWS | 9 |
CORRESPONDING FELLOWS 1945 | 14 |
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS By Sir John Clapham | 14 |
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