Template:RQ:Kingsley Miscellanies
Appearance
1846–1859, Charles Kingsley, “(please specify the page)”, in Miscellanies […], volume (please specify |volume=I or II), London: John W[illiam] Parker and Son, […], published 1859, →OCLC:
- The following documentation is located at Template:RQ:Kingsley Miscellanies/documentation. [edit]
- Useful links: subpage list • links • redirects • transclusions • errors (parser/module) • sandbox
Usage
[edit]This template may be used on Wiktionary entry pages to quote from a collection of Charles Kingsley's works entitled Miscellanies (1st edition, 1859, 2 volumes). It can be used to create a link to online versions of the work at the Internet Archive:
Essay | First page number |
---|---|
Volume I | |
Sir Walter Raleigh and His Time (May 1855) | page 1 |
‘A Mad World, My Masters’ (1858) | page 110 |
My Winter-garden (April 1858) | page 134 |
Chalk-stream Studies (September 1858) | page 164 |
Tennyson (September 1850) | page 214 |
The Poetry of Sacred and Legendary Art (March 1849) | page 234 |
Alexander Smith and Alexander Pope (October 1853) | page 269 |
Thoughts on Shelley and Byron (November 1853) | page 304 |
Hours with the Mystics (September 1856) | page 325 |
Burns and His School (November 1851) | page 357 |
Volume II | |
Mansfield’s Paraguay, Brazil, and the Plate (November 1856) | page 1 |
Froude’s History of England (November 1856) | page 25 |
Plays and Puritans (May 1856) | page 77 |
The Agricultural Crisis (November 1850) | page 143 |
The Water Supply of London (May 1851) | page 199 |
North Devon. A Prose Idyl. (July 1849) | page 237 |
Speech in Behalf of the Ladies’ Sanitary Association, 1859 | page 309 |
Great Cities, and Their Influence for Good and Evil (delivered 5 October 1857) | page 318 |
On the Study of Natural History (delivered 1846) | page 346 |
Thoughts in a Gravel-pit (delivered 1857) | page 367 |
Parameters
[edit]The template takes the following parameters:
|1=
or|volume=
– mandatory: the volume number quoted from in uppercase Roman numerals, either|volume=I
or|volume=II
.|chapter=
– if quoting from "North Devon" in volume II, the name of the chapter quoted from.|2=
or|page=
, or|pages=
– mandatory: the page number(s) of the work. If using|pages=
to quote a range of pages, note the following:- Separate the first and last pages of the range with an en dash, like this:
|pages=10–11
. - You must also use
|pageref=
to specify the page number that the template should link to (usually the page on which the Wiktionary entry appears).
- Separate the first and last pages of the range with an en dash, like this:
- This parameter must be specified to have the template determine the title quoted from, and to link to an online version of the work.
|3=
,|text=
, or|passage=
– the passage to be quoted.|footer=
– a comment on the passage quoted.|brackets=
– use|brackets=on
to surround a quotation with brackets. This indicates that the quotation either contains a mere mention of a term (for example, "some people find the word manoeuvre hard to spell") rather than an actual use of it (for example, "we need to manoeuvre carefully to avoid causing upset"), or does not provide an actual instance of a term but provides information about related terms.
Examples
[edit]- Wikitext:
{{RQ:Kingsley Miscellanies|volume=I|page=146|passage=That ring-dove, who was cooing half-a-mile away, has hushed his moan; that flock of long-tailed titmice, which were '''twinging''' and pecking about the fir-cones a few minutes since, are gone; and now there is not even a gnat to quiver in the slant sun-rays.}}
; or{{RQ:Kingsley Miscellanies|I|146|That ring-dove, who was cooing half-a-mile away, has hushed his moan; that flock of long-tailed titmice, which were '''twinging''' and pecking about the fir-cones a few minutes since, are gone; and now there is not even a gnat to quiver in the slant sun-rays.}}
- Result:
- 1858 April, Charles Kingsley, “My Winter-garden”, in Miscellanies […], volume I, London: John W[illiam] Parker and Son, […], published 1859, →OCLC, page 146:
- That ring-dove, who was cooing half-a-mile away, has hushed his moan; that flock of long-tailed titmice, which were twinging and pecking about the fir-cones a few minutes since, are gone; and now there is not even a gnat to quiver in the slant sun-rays.
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