The Quarterly Review, Band 19William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) John Murray, 1818 |
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Seite 33
... sense of religion , may justly be questioned ; but he was perfectly well aware how closely his own interests were connected with those of the Church of England , and therefore he obtained from his mother a promise that she would not ...
... sense of religion , may justly be questioned ; but he was perfectly well aware how closely his own interests were connected with those of the Church of England , and therefore he obtained from his mother a promise that she would not ...
Seite 40
... sense or reason . The clamour and peril grew so excessive that it made the whole Court amaz'd , and they did with infinite paines and greate difficulty reduce and appease the people , sending troops of soldiers and guards to cause them ...
... sense or reason . The clamour and peril grew so excessive that it made the whole Court amaz'd , and they did with infinite paines and greate difficulty reduce and appease the people , sending troops of soldiers and guards to cause them ...
Seite 47
... sense of their own and their country's interests , He produced a volume upon the subject ; Charles II . , who loved the navy , and like his brother would have made a better admiral than a king , twice thanked him personally for the work ...
... sense of their own and their country's interests , He produced a volume upon the subject ; Charles II . , who loved the navy , and like his brother would have made a better admiral than a king , twice thanked him personally for the work ...
Seite 70
... sense of religion impose , he feels little inclination to reassume them : as population advances , the back - woodsmen retire ; for ' strangers appear among them as invaders of their privileges , as they have intruded on the better ...
... sense of religion impose , he feels little inclination to reassume them : as population advances , the back - woodsmen retire ; for ' strangers appear among them as invaders of their privileges , as they have intruded on the better ...
Seite 77
... sense of the mercies which are heaped upon her with an unsparing hand . " Sunk , however , and ruined as she is , in Mr. Birkbeck's opinion , he frankly acknowledges he would have been well satisfied to re- main in her if he had owned ...
... sense of the mercies which are heaped upon her with an unsparing hand . " Sunk , however , and ruined as she is , in Mr. Birkbeck's opinion , he frankly acknowledges he would have been well satisfied to re- main in her if he had owned ...
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