Miscellanies, Volumen2Macmillan, 1863 |
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Página 25
... persons regarded the book with utter contempt and indignation ; it seemed to them a crime to have written it ; a proof of ' banausia , ' as Aristotle would have called it , only to be outdone by the writing a Comic Bible . ' After a ...
... persons regarded the book with utter contempt and indignation ; it seemed to them a crime to have written it ; a proof of ' banausia , ' as Aristotle would have called it , only to be outdone by the writing a Comic Bible . ' After a ...
Página 41
... persons judged it necessary for the Pope to grant Henry a divorce , and , by enabling him to marry again , give him the hope of an undisputed heir - male . ' The Pope had full power to do this ; in fact , such cases had been for ...
... persons judged it necessary for the Pope to grant Henry a divorce , and , by enabling him to marry again , give him the hope of an undisputed heir - male . ' The Pope had full power to do this ; in fact , such cases had been for ...
Página 43
... person , who , but for the catastrophe with which it closed , would not have so readily obtained forgiveness for having admitted the addresses of the king , or for having received the homage of the court as its future sovereign , while ...
... person , who , but for the catastrophe with which it closed , would not have so readily obtained forgiveness for having admitted the addresses of the king , or for having received the homage of the court as its future sovereign , while ...
Página 50
... person whom they were addressing disliked compliments , and chose to be treated as a man . He seems to have been always kind , always considerate ; inquiring into their private concerns with genuine interest , and winning , as a ...
... person whom they were addressing disliked compliments , and chose to be treated as a man . He seems to have been always kind , always considerate ; inquiring into their private concerns with genuine interest , and winning , as a ...
Página 62
... person , because they had no press to grumble for them but what is there then in the M.P.'s letter to Lord Surrey , quoted by Mr. Hallam , p . 25 , or in the more pointed letter of Warham's , two pages on , which we do not see lying on ...
... person , because they had no press to grumble for them but what is there then in the M.P.'s letter to Lord Surrey , quoted by Mr. Hallam , p . 25 , or in the more pointed letter of Warham's , two pages on , which we do not see lying on ...
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