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 55
... called in London , in order to receive some important communications from France . " Here I am , " said he , " ready to raise my banner ; give me four thousand men , and I will instantly put myself at their head . " This was a test for ...
... called in London , in order to receive some important communications from France . " Here I am , " said he , " ready to raise my banner ; give me four thousand men , and I will instantly put myself at their head . " This was a test for ...
Seite 72
... called , had heaped without measure on his friend . The approach of Lavoisier , who comes next in order or disorder , whichever it may be , excites Lord Brougham to a strain of condemnation for which he took the pitch in his former ...
... called , had heaped without measure on his friend . The approach of Lavoisier , who comes next in order or disorder , whichever it may be , excites Lord Brougham to a strain of condemnation for which he took the pitch in his former ...
Seite 77
... called , who prided himself on writing French like a native , and whose joy it was to spend so many of his days at a distance from his own land . Gibbon was one of those who have lightened the labor of biographers by giving some sketch ...
... called , who prided himself on writing French like a native , and whose joy it was to spend so many of his days at a distance from his own land . Gibbon was one of those who have lightened the labor of biographers by giving some sketch ...
Seite 79
... called his military life ; he complained of the loss of time which it occasioned , and the rude companionship to which it exposed him ; it was altogether unsuited to his taste , which did not fit him even for literary warfare , save ...
... called his military life ; he complained of the loss of time which it occasioned , and the rude companionship to which it exposed him ; it was altogether unsuited to his taste , which did not fit him even for literary warfare , save ...
Seite 91
... called , in Fénélon's case , the devilish attractions of geometry . " When he left them , he devoted himself entirely to those studies . In order to increase his small income , he made some attempts to study a profession ; but in ...
... called , in Fénélon's case , the devilish attractions of geometry . " When he left them , he devoted himself entirely to those studies . In order to increase his small income , he made some attempts to study a profession ; but in ...
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