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 3
... thought my tutor had parts enough , but as his ambition made him much suspected of the col- lege , so his grudge to Dr. Lawrence , the governor of it , whom he afterwards supplanted , took up so much of his time , that he seldom or ...
... thought my tutor had parts enough , but as his ambition made him much suspected of the col- lege , so his grudge to Dr. Lawrence , the governor of it , whom he afterwards supplanted , took up so much of his time , that he seldom or ...
Seite 4
... thought of nothing but the pursuit of vanity , and the confused imaginations of young men . ' men . ' The signs of the times were then too evident to be mistaken ; the palace at Lambeth had been assaulted by a rabble ; and libels and ...
... thought of nothing but the pursuit of vanity , and the confused imaginations of young men . ' men . ' The signs of the times were then too evident to be mistaken ; the palace at Lambeth had been assaulted by a rabble ; and libels and ...
Seite 5
... thought Paris was the strongest town in Christendom , for he took strong in that sense as we do in England when we say such a man hath a strong breath . These things considered it could not but be an infinite happiness granted by nature ...
... thought Paris was the strongest town in Christendom , for he took strong in that sense as we do in England when we say such a man hath a strong breath . These things considered it could not but be an infinite happiness granted by nature ...
Seite 7
... thought Paris was the strongest town in Christendom , for he took strong in that sense as we do in England when we say such a man hath a strong breath . These things considered it could not but be an infinite happiness granted by nature ...
... thought Paris was the strongest town in Christendom , for he took strong in that sense as we do in England when we say such a man hath a strong breath . These things considered it could not but be an infinite happiness granted by nature ...
Seite 11
... desire of a Dominican friar , of standing godfather to a Turk and a Jew , —a remarkable instance of liberality in the friar , unless he doubted the sincerity 6 6 sincerity of his neophytes , and thought a Evelyn's Memoirs . 11.
... desire of a Dominican friar , of standing godfather to a Turk and a Jew , —a remarkable instance of liberality in the friar , unless he doubted the sincerity 6 6 sincerity of his neophytes , and thought a Evelyn's Memoirs . 11.
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