| Leslie Stephen - 1885 - 514 pages
...unaltered. Some of Bentley's friends urged him to refute the slander publicly, but he remained silent. 'Out of a natural aversion to all quarrels and broils,...take no notice of it, but to let the matter drop.' About two years later (1097) Bentley's old friend, William Wotton, brought out a second edition of... | |
| Richard Claverhouse Jebb - 1882 - 252 pages
...not merely a charge of rudeness, but also of failure in his duty as Librarian. He remained silent. " Out of a natural aversion to all quarrels and broils,...take no notice of it, but to let the matter drop." But in 1697 Wotton was preparing a second edition of the " Reflections," and claimed Bentley's old... | |
| Richard William Church - 1895 - 714 pages
...not merely a charge of rudeness, but also of failure in his duty as Librarian. He remained silent. ' Out of a natural aversion to all quarrels and broils,...take no notice of it, but to let the matter drop.' But in 1697 Wotton was preparing a second edition of the ' Reflections,' and claimed Bentley's old... | |
| Richard Claverhouse Jebb - 1899 - 276 pages
...not merely a charge of rudeness, but also of failure in his duty as Librarian. He remained silent. " Out of a natural aversion to all quarrels and broils,...take no notice of it, but to let the matter drop." But in 1697 Wotton was preparing a second edition of the " Reflections," and claimed Bentley's old... | |
| Theodore Wesley Koch - 1911 - 474 pages
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| Theodore Wesley Koch - 1914 - 28 pages
...a natural aversion to all quarrels and broils," he wrote, with what later seemed refined irony, ' ' and out of regard to the editor himself, I resolved...take no notice of it, but to let the matter drop." A few years later Bentley reviewed Boyle's work in a way that incited Boyle, with the aid of half a... | |
| Rory Litwin - 2014 - 265 pages
...of a natural aversion to all quarrels and broils," he wrote, with what later seemed refined irony, "and out of regard to the editor himself, I resolved...take no notice of it, but to let the matter drop." A few years later Bentley reviewed Boyle's work in a way that incited Boyle, with the aid of half a... | |
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