The Anti-Jacobin Review and Protestant Advocate: Or, Monthly Political and Literary Censor, Band 32Sherwood, Neely, and Jones, Paternoster-Row, 1809 |
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Seite 1
... ment , la partie la plus curieuse de leurs ecrits ; " and when they are published , as in the present instance , without any alte- rations or modulations to the public taste , they furnish the best and most interesting specimens of ...
... ment , la partie la plus curieuse de leurs ecrits ; " and when they are published , as in the present instance , without any alte- rations or modulations to the public taste , they furnish the best and most interesting specimens of ...
Seite 10
... ment . The bishops , as partisans of the pope , were for subjecting England to the imperial and papal laws , and therefore began with a circumstance most to the taste of the barons . The barons smelt the contrivance ; and rejected a ...
... ment . The bishops , as partisans of the pope , were for subjecting England to the imperial and papal laws , and therefore began with a circumstance most to the taste of the barons . The barons smelt the contrivance ; and rejected a ...
Seite 20
... ment with the celebrated Heidegger to perform Operas on their own account : they accordingly engaged several new performers ; but the nobility , exasperated at the Saxon's tyrannical conduct , entered into a subscription , with which ...
... ment with the celebrated Heidegger to perform Operas on their own account : they accordingly engaged several new performers ; but the nobility , exasperated at the Saxon's tyrannical conduct , entered into a subscription , with which ...
Seite 27
... ment , Lord Macartney had the mortification of experiencing the inattention and neglect of government ; being suffered to remain almost a singular instance of all those employed in high stations in India , in not having received any ...
... ment , Lord Macartney had the mortification of experiencing the inattention and neglect of government ; being suffered to remain almost a singular instance of all those employed in high stations in India , in not having received any ...
Seite 58
... ment . " With partial fondness we retain A sense of pleasures past , Mingled , however , with some pain , To think how short they last . ' Tis vain , we know , for man to mourn Pastimes that never can return , * With the bard's ...
... ment . " With partial fondness we retain A sense of pleasures past , Mingled , however , with some pain , To think how short they last . ' Tis vain , we know , for man to mourn Pastimes that never can return , * With the bard's ...
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