The North American Review, Band 64Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge O. Everett, 1847 Vols. 227-230, no. 2 include: Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
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Seite 25
... reasons for believing that his partisans were sufficiently numerous to secure him a hearty recep- tion . A portion of the Highlanders had deserted , but their places would soon be supplied by the English Jacobites , who would join him ...
... reasons for believing that his partisans were sufficiently numerous to secure him a hearty recep- tion . A portion of the Highlanders had deserted , but their places would soon be supplied by the English Jacobites , who would join him ...
Seite 37
... reason to hope that he might open the campaign with the defeat of Cumberland , and renew , under better auspices , his attempt upon England . These well founded hopes were defeated by the shameful negligence and dilatori- ness of the ...
... reason to hope that he might open the campaign with the defeat of Cumberland , and renew , under better auspices , his attempt upon England . These well founded hopes were defeated by the shameful negligence and dilatori- ness of the ...
Seite 48
... reason to hope that this also might pass off without attracting attention . The chief difficulty lay in framing a suitable disguise for the prince ; for at this moment every person was closely watched , and there was no such thing as ...
... reason to hope that this also might pass off without attracting attention . The chief difficulty lay in framing a suitable disguise for the prince ; for at this moment every person was closely watched , and there was no such thing as ...
Seite 60
... reason that they are too severely true . Critics of that nation have complained of want of novelty in his life of Voltaire ; but they do not say whether they expected him to discover new facts in the history of one who spent all his ...
... reason that they are too severely true . Critics of that nation have complained of want of novelty in his life of Voltaire ; but they do not say whether they expected him to discover new facts in the history of one who spent all his ...
Seite 72
... reason why his friend should not mention it even in words of praise . It is true , he had no right understanding of the reli- gious relations in which he stood ; but this should be dealt with as a misfortune , rather than as one of the ...
... reason why his friend should not mention it even in words of praise . It is true , he had no right understanding of the reli- gious relations in which he stood ; but this should be dealt with as a misfortune , rather than as one of the ...
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