| Thomas Warton, James Bentham, Francis Grose, John Milner - 1808 - 250 pages
...invented in this country : it is certain that it was here brought to its highest state of perfection ; and the testimonies of other countries, whose national...English artists, adds great weight to this assertion, and peculiar propriety to the term ENGLISH, now proposed to be substituted to the word Gothic. " The... | |
| John Britton, Edward Wedlake Brayley, Joseph Nightingale, James Norris Brewer, John Evans, John Hodgson, Francis Charles Laird, Frederic Shoberl, John Bigland, Thomas Rees - 1813 - 696 pages
...invented in this country : it is ceitain that it was here brought to its highest state of perfection ; and the testimonies of other countries, whose national...their most beautiful churches to English artists, add great wcight to this assertion, and peculiar propriety to the term English, now proposed to be... | |
| Joseph Nightingale - 1813 - 436 pages
...invented in this country : it is certain tli.it it was here brought to its highest state of perfection ; and the testimonies of other countries, whose national traditions ascribe their most beautiful cburches to English artists, add great weight to this assertion, and peculiar propriety to the term... | |
| 1814 - 786 pages
...was here brought to its highest state of perfection ; and the testimonies of other Countries, where national traditions ascribe their most beautiful Churches...English artists, adds great weight to this assertion, and peculiar propriety to the term English, now proposed to be substituted to the word Gothic." This... | |
| James Norris Brewer - 1818 - 734 pages
...invented in this country : it is certain that it v> :>s here brought to its highest slate of perfection ; and the testimonies of other countries, whose national...English artists, adds great weight to this assertion, and peculiar propriety to the term English, now proposed to be substituted to the word Gothic. " The... | |
| James Norris Brewer - 1801 - 1208 pages
...inveiitfd in this country : it is certain that it was here brought to its highest stale of perfection ; and the testimonies of other countries, whose national...English artists, adds great weight to this assertion, and peculiar propriety to the term English, now proposed to be substituted to the word Gothic. " The... | |
| Thomas Allen - 1832 - 230 pages
...country ; it is certain that it was here brought to its highest state of perfection and the testimony of other countries, whose national traditions ascribe...English artists, adds great weight to this assertion, and peculiar propriety to the term " English," now proposed to be substituted for the word " Gothic."... | |
| John Milner - 1835 - 504 pages
...vented -in this country: it is certain that it was here brought to its highest state of perfection ; and the testimonies of other countries, whose national...English artists, adds great weight to this assertion, and peculiar propriety to the term ENGLISH, now proposed to be substituted to the word Gothic. " The... | |
| George Pryce - 1858 - 126 pages
...invented in this country : it is certain that it was here brought to its highest state of perfection ; and the testimonies of other countries, whose national...English artists, adds great weight to this assertion, and peculiar propriety to the term c2 " It is much to be wished (says a judicious writer) that the... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, Sir William Smith, John Murray, Rowland Edmund Prothero Baron Ernle, George Walter Prothero - 1809 - 498 pages
...brouht to its best state of t Sublime and Beautiful, p. 2, s. 10. _r ^ perfection ; and the testimony of other countries, whose national traditions ascribe...churches to English artists, adds great weight to the question, and peculiar propriety to the term English, which will be used instead of Gothic in the... | |
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