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 49
... object of the present INQUIRY is to show , " that fever consists essentially in topical inflammation of the brain , or its membranes . " The work comprises five chapters , each of which is divided into a certain number of sections . The ...
... object of the present INQUIRY is to show , " that fever consists essentially in topical inflammation of the brain , or its membranes . " The work comprises five chapters , each of which is divided into a certain number of sections . The ...
Seite 55
... objects highly favourable to the descriptive poet . We are not very fond of blank verse ; and , early in life , we adopted Johnson's opinion of it , as declared in his remarks on " The Splendid Shilling " of Phillips - an opi- nion in ...
... objects highly favourable to the descriptive poet . We are not very fond of blank verse ; and , early in life , we adopted Johnson's opinion of it , as declared in his remarks on " The Splendid Shilling " of Phillips - an opi- nion in ...
Seite 64
... object upon earth is more ridiculous and more dis- gusting , than a boy with the airs and manners of a man ? A monkey is a preferable being , and much more pleasant company ; for they are both mimics , mechanically re- peating what they ...
... object upon earth is more ridiculous and more dis- gusting , than a boy with the airs and manners of a man ? A monkey is a preferable being , and much more pleasant company ; for they are both mimics , mechanically re- peating what they ...
Seite 66
... object of his study is mathematics , he collects his politics from Paley , and his religion from Watson - but , without making an invidious distinction between the two universities , it is suf- ficient for the present purpose to observe ...
... object of his study is mathematics , he collects his politics from Paley , and his religion from Watson - but , without making an invidious distinction between the two universities , it is suf- ficient for the present purpose to observe ...
Seite 67
... objects of British jurisprudence ; not to gain an adequate knowledge of the history of his country , and of the laws of other states , enable him to form a just estimate of the comparative excellence of those laws with the laws of his ...
... objects of British jurisprudence ; not to gain an adequate knowledge of the history of his country , and of the laws of other states , enable him to form a just estimate of the comparative excellence of those laws with the laws of his ...
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