The Foreign Review, and Continental Miscellany, Volym 1Black, Young, and Young, 1828 |
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Sida 2
... English memoirs has been com- menced , and is in a fair way of being completed , before any collective body of the precious originals has been undertaken here . Good use , too , has already been made of the excellent ma- terials which ...
... English memoirs has been com- menced , and is in a fair way of being completed , before any collective body of the precious originals has been undertaken here . Good use , too , has already been made of the excellent ma- terials which ...
Sida 3
... English historical me- moirs which have recently been published in France : there , he says , you are struck with the want of movement in the recital ; there , he says , you remark , more than any thing , the single and earnest ...
... English historical me- moirs which have recently been published in France : there , he says , you are struck with the want of movement in the recital ; there , he says , you remark , more than any thing , the single and earnest ...
Sida 4
... English , they nevertheless ultimately obtained their most important suc- cesses against that enemy . The latter part exhibits the suc- cessful policy of France under the most politic of its kings , in dis- membering the estates of a ...
... English , they nevertheless ultimately obtained their most important suc- cesses against that enemy . The latter part exhibits the suc- cessful policy of France under the most politic of its kings , in dis- membering the estates of a ...
Sida 5
... English court Waiting , with other young nobles of both nations upon the two kings at dinner , he observed that one of them , who was English , served his own sovereign before the stranger ; upon which , ( the reader shall have it in ...
... English court Waiting , with other young nobles of both nations upon the two kings at dinner , he observed that one of them , who was English , served his own sovereign before the stranger ; upon which , ( the reader shall have it in ...
Sida 6
... English alliance ; she went to her son , who , under pretence of illness , had avoided an interview upon this matter with the King of France , and , throwing her robe aside , when her arguments failed to persuade him , she laid bare her ...
... English alliance ; she went to her son , who , under pretence of illness , had avoided an interview upon this matter with the King of France , and , throwing her robe aside , when her arguments failed to persuade him , she laid bare her ...
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Sida 272 - I can, at any rate, show that the experiments made with it at the end of the seventeenth and the beginning of the eighteenth century fully confirm the high encomium bestowed by Dioscorides upon his indicum.
Sida 141 - We cannot justify Werner : yet let him be condemned with pity ! And well were it could each of us apply to himself those words, which Hitzig, in his friendly indignation, would 'thunder in the ears...
Sida 456 - Audacious ; but, that seat soon failing, meets A vast vacuity : all unawares, Fluttering his pennons vain, plumb down he drops Ten thousand' fathom deep, and to this hour Down had been falling, had not by ill chance The strong rebuff of some tumultuous cloud, Instinct with fire and nitre, hurried him As many miles aloft : that fury stayed, Quenched in a boggy Syrtis, neither sea, Nor good dry land : nigh foundered, on he fares Treading the crude consistence, half on foot, Half flying; behoves him...
Sida 432 - A reposing state, in which the Hill were brought under us, not we obliged to mount it, might indeed for the present be more convenient; but, in the end, it could not be equally satisfying. Continuance of passive pleasure, it should never be forgotten, is here, as under all conditions of mortal existence, an impossibility. Everywhere in life, the true question is, not what we gain, but what we do...
Sida 206 - ... three times a year; and in the valleys, the fields are seen shaven as close as a bowling-green, and all the inequalities clipped as with a pair of scissors. In Switzerland as in Norway, for the same reasons, the art of mowing seems to be carried to its highest pitch of perfection. As, however, the improvement of the lands in the...
Sida 500 - Lordships judgment (which in the present case I feel is the Tribunal of my Country) and if, under all circumstances, it is decided that I am wrong, I ought, for the sake of our Country, to be superseded...
Sida 490 - the Colossus of that Congress — the great pillar of support to the Declaration of Independence, and its ablest advocate and champion on the floor of the House, was John Adams.
Sida 249 - Diss' egli a noi, guardate e attendete Alla miseria del maestro Adamo : Io ebbi vivo assai di quel eh' io volli, E ora, lasso ! un goccio! d' acqua bramo. Li ruscelletti, che de...
Sida 249 - One drop of water now, alas ! I crave. The rills, that glitter down the grassy slopes Of Casentino, making fresh and soft The banks whereby they glide to Arno's stream, Stand ever in my view ; and not in vain ; For more the pictured semblance dries me up, Much more than the disease, which makes the flesh Desert these shrivel'd cheeks.
Sida 434 - How indifferent did the audience sit; how little use was made of the handkerchief, except by such as took snuff! Did not CEdipus somewhat remind us of a blubbering schoolboy, and Jocasta of a decayed milliner?