The Literary Panorama and National Register, Volym 9C. Taylor, 1819 |
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Sida 59
... attend . A clergyman , called " Clerical Visitor , " has the superintendence of this penitentiary , with an annual salary of 1201 . The state of manufactures and industry , and the general state of the institution , will appear from the ...
... attend . A clergyman , called " Clerical Visitor , " has the superintendence of this penitentiary , with an annual salary of 1201 . The state of manufactures and industry , and the general state of the institution , will appear from the ...
Sida 87
... attended with flames and smoke . After the sea was calmed , a boat was sent from Unalaschka , with twenty Russian hunters in her , who landed on this island , June 1 , 1814. They found it full of crevices , and precipices . The surface ...
... attended with flames and smoke . After the sea was calmed , a boat was sent from Unalaschka , with twenty Russian hunters in her , who landed on this island , June 1 , 1814. They found it full of crevices , and precipices . The surface ...
Sida 89
... attended with powers of the human mind became more a world of difficulty , and yet it must acute and better known . If theology had still be owned , that the learning of hitherto absorbed the greater attention of the early and middle ...
... attended with powers of the human mind became more a world of difficulty , and yet it must acute and better known . If theology had still be owned , that the learning of hitherto absorbed the greater attention of the early and middle ...
Sida 95
... attended to when by suggesting an improvement ? ' " The they come to advise . But we have said whole , we have said , is excellent , yet as enough on the subject ; and instead of re- no work is absolute faultless , it does seem sorting ...
... attended to when by suggesting an improvement ? ' " The they come to advise . But we have said whole , we have said , is excellent , yet as enough on the subject ; and instead of re- no work is absolute faultless , it does seem sorting ...
Sida 103
... attend- ed with the most happy circumstances of success amongst the different classes of the poor . The Earl of Liverpool , when tra- velling in the West , in the course of the past Summer , observed that , he was per- suaded , from ...
... attend- ed with the most happy circumstances of success amongst the different classes of the poor . The Earl of Liverpool , when tra- velling in the West , in the course of the past Summer , observed that , he was per- suaded , from ...
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Sida 873 - The whole commerce between master and slave is a perpetual exercise of the most boisterous passions, — the most unremitting despotism on the one part and degrading submissions on the other. Our children see this, and learn to imitate it; for man is an imitative animal.
Sida 25 - M'Namara had with the Prince on this occasion, the latter declared that it was not a violent passion, or indeed any particular regard, which attached him to Mrs Walkinshaw, and that he could see her removed from him without any concern ; but he would not receive directions, in respect to his private conduct, from any man alive. When M'Namara returned to London, and reported the Prince's answer to the gentlemen who had employed him, they were astonished and confounded. However, they soon resolved...
Sida 421 - This man preferred our country and our religion, and brought to both, genius superior to what he found in either. He called forth the latent virtues of the human heart, and taught men to discover in themselves a mine of charity, of which the proprietors had been unconscious. In feeding the lamp of charity, he has almost exhausted the lamp of life.
Sida 873 - There must doubtless be an unhappy influence on the manners of our people produced by the existence of slavery among us. The whole commerce between master and slave is a perpetual exercise of the most boisterous passions, the most unremitting despotism on the one part, and degrading submissions on the other.
Sida 457 - In a beautiful valley enclosed between two lofty mountains, he had formed a luxurious garden, stored with every delicious fruit and every fragrant shrub that could be procured. Palaces of various sizes and forms were erected in different parts of the grounds, ornamented with works in gold, with paintings, and with furniture of rich silks. By means of small conduits contrived in these buildings, streams of wine, milk, honey, and some of pure water, were seen to flow in every direction. The inhabitants...
Sida 101 - Jesus' sake, forbeare To dig the dust enclosed here: Blessed be the man that spares these stones, And curst be he that moves my bones.
Sida 579 - A MANUAL OF CHEMISTRY; containing the principal Facts of the Science, arranged in the order in which they are discussed and illustrated in the Lectures at the Royal Institution.
Sida 25 - Jupiter vult perdere, &c. could be properly applied to any person, whom could it so well fit as the gentleman of whom I have been speaking? for it is difficult by any other means to account for such a sudden infatuation. He was, indeed, soon afterwards made sensible of his misconduct, when it was too late to repair it : for from this era may truly be dated the ruin of his cause; which, for the future, can only subsist in the non-juring congregations, which are generally formed of the meanest people,...
Sida 25 - ... prison, and conducted out of France, he sent for this girl, who soon acquired such a dominion over him, that she was acquainted with all his schemes, and trusted with his most secret correspondence. As soon as this was known in England, all those persons of distinction who were attached to him were greatly alarmed : they imagined that this wench had been placed in his family by the English ministers ; and, considering her sister's situation, they seemed to have some ground for their suspicion...
Sida 873 - ... for man is an imitative animal. The parent storms, the child looks on, catches the lineaments of wrath, puts on the same airs in the circle of smaller slaves, gives loose to the worst of passions; and thus nursed, educated, and daily exercised in tyranny, cannot but be stamped by it with odious peculiarities. The man must be a prodigy who can retain his morals and manners undepraved by such circumstances.