English Prose: Eighteenth centurySir Henry Craik Macmillan, 1911 |
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Seite 22
... considered only as an im- posture ; an engine of government to keep the people in order ; even then an endeavour to unhinge it , unless with a design to substitute a better in its stead , would in my opinion be highly unreasonable . But ...
... considered only as an im- posture ; an engine of government to keep the people in order ; even then an endeavour to unhinge it , unless with a design to substitute a better in its stead , would in my opinion be highly unreasonable . But ...
Seite 32
... considered , how many men are connected by all the fore- mentioned ways of trade and business , and the expenses of these men and their families , in all the several articles of convenient and fashionable living , whereby all sorts of ...
... considered , how many men are connected by all the fore- mentioned ways of trade and business , and the expenses of these men and their families , in all the several articles of convenient and fashionable living , whereby all sorts of ...
Seite 35
... considered by all men , but most considered by most men . They and the phantoms that result from those appearances , the children of imagination grafted upon sense , such for example as pure space , are thought by many the very first in ...
... considered by all men , but most considered by most men . They and the phantoms that result from those appearances , the children of imagination grafted upon sense , such for example as pure space , are thought by many the very first in ...
Seite 48
... considered as a gentleman , that he desires to be used as the servant of all ; and in the spirit of his Lord and Master girds himself , and is glad to kneel down and wash any of their feet . He now thinks the poorest creature in his ...
... considered as a gentleman , that he desires to be used as the servant of all ; and in the spirit of his Lord and Master girds himself , and is glad to kneel down and wash any of their feet . He now thinks the poorest creature in his ...
Seite 58
... considered the father of the English novel ; and in many of the essentials of his art he has never been surpassed . His convention of a correspondence between the characters is probably as good as a better , though he does nothing to ...
... considered the father of the English novel ; and in many of the essentials of his art he has never been surpassed . His convention of a correspondence between the characters is probably as good as a better , though he does nothing to ...
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