The European Magazine: And London Review, Volym 41Philological Society of London, 1802 |
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... tion Monthly Obituary , 34 Price of Stocks . " ibid . 9 37 ibid . 38 39 49 58 62 68 77 ibid . London : Printed by Burtney & Gold Shoe - lane , Fleet - freet , For J. SEWELL , CORNHILL . Perfons who refide abroad , and who wish to be ...
... tion Monthly Obituary , 34 Price of Stocks . " ibid . 9 37 ibid . 38 39 49 58 62 68 77 ibid . London : Printed by Burtney & Gold Shoe - lane , Fleet - freet , For J. SEWELL , CORNHILL . Perfons who refide abroad , and who wish to be ...
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... tion ; and which afterwards , at the dif- tance of more than forty years , when he was called on to employ his eloquence in the national commemoration of the revolution , feemed to rekindle the fires of his youth , His fituation as a ...
... tion ; and which afterwards , at the dif- tance of more than forty years , when he was called on to employ his eloquence in the national commemoration of the revolution , feemed to rekindle the fires of his youth , His fituation as a ...
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... tion is ever to be bestowed . ' ( To be concluded in our next . ) · MONS . BUFFON has indeed given an afflicting picture of human na- ture in his defcription of the man of America . But fure I am , there never was a picture more unlike ...
... tion is ever to be bestowed . ' ( To be concluded in our next . ) · MONS . BUFFON has indeed given an afflicting picture of human na- ture in his defcription of the man of America . But fure I am , there never was a picture more unlike ...
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... tion , leaves , we understand , but an in- adequate remuneration to the propri- etors ; who , we think , may very mo- deftly affert pretenfions to public favour , as having formed a school for artists , and brought to confiderable ...
... tion , leaves , we understand , but an in- adequate remuneration to the propri- etors ; who , we think , may very mo- deftly affert pretenfions to public favour , as having formed a school for artists , and brought to confiderable ...
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... tion of the rich , and nearly to the ruin of the middle claffes ; while the wants and miferies of the peafantry , with fome few exceptions , which will be found particularized , have accumu- lated in the proportion that plans have been ...
... tion of the rich , and nearly to the ruin of the middle claffes ; while the wants and miferies of the peafantry , with fome few exceptions , which will be found particularized , have accumu- lated in the proportion that plans have been ...
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Populära avsnitt
Sida 285 - By opening this intercourse between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, and forming regular establishments through the interior, and at both extremes, as well as along the coasts and islands, the entire command of the fur trade of North America might be obtained, from latitude 48.
Sida 250 - Poetry, he will find but very few precepts in it, which he may not meet with in Aristotle, and which were not commonly known by all the poets of the Augustan age. His way of expressing and applying them, not his invention of them, is what we are chiefly to admire.
Sida 250 - God will one time or another make a difference between the good and the evil ; but there is little or no difference made in this world. Therefore there must be another world wherein this difference shall be made.
Sida 379 - Butler-abo, or other words like, or otherwise contrary to the king's laws, his crown, and dignity, and peace; but to call only on St. George, or the name of his sovereign lord the king of England for the time being.
Sida 163 - Toulouse, where they fixed their residence for eighteen months, and where, in addition to the pleasure of an agreeable society, Mr. Smith had an opportunity of correcting and extending his information concerning the internal policy of France, by the intimacy in which he lived with some of the principal persons of the Parliament. From Toulouse they went, by a pretty extensive tour, through the south of France to Geneva.
Sida 212 - The Chancellor of the Exchequer moved the order of the day for the house...
Sida 404 - That the term should be one month from the Channel and the North Seas as far as the Canary Islands Inclusively, whether in the Ocean or in the Mediterranean. Two months from the said Canary Islands as far as the Equinoctial Line or Equator ; and lastly, Five months in all other Parts of the World, without any Exception, or any other more particular description of Time or Place.
Sida 253 - ... nothing of what he had a mind to eat or drink ; which gave him a body full of humours, and made his fits of the gout...
Sida 154 - I understanding that language, learnt that there was a village about three miles distant, called Belmont. This Indian went to the village, and gave information that the French had landed, and in about two hours the governor of the village, a clergyman, with several armed men, took Conway and Parr prisoners, tying...
Sida 256 - Attorney-General, he was by no means what is called a prerogative lawyer. He loved the Constitution, and maintained the just prerogative of the Crown, but without stretching it to the oppression of the people. He was naturally humane, moderate, and decent ; and when, by his former employments he was obliged to prosecute...