The Monthly Review, Volumen3Hurst, Robinson, 1838 |
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Página 12
... favour- ably reviewed by us . In the present work , besides furnishing addi- tional descriptions and details concerning the interesting and inde- pendent tribes which inhabit the countries referred to , he takes us homeward with him ...
... favour- ably reviewed by us . In the present work , besides furnishing addi- tional descriptions and details concerning the interesting and inde- pendent tribes which inhabit the countries referred to , he takes us homeward with him ...
Página 17
... favoured by nature should be oppressed , neglected , or disfigured by man , affords one of those pain- ful contrasts which travellers are constantly attesting , and which , the longer we live and the more we read , endears home and ...
... favoured by nature should be oppressed , neglected , or disfigured by man , affords one of those pain- ful contrasts which travellers are constantly attesting , and which , the longer we live and the more we read , endears home and ...
Página 35
... favour ? -take them for sincere and real , and ground on them a desire that , at least , my state with the King might be brought to an explicit point ? —that I could no longer remain in the dark , concerning a thing upon which all my ...
... favour ? -take them for sincere and real , and ground on them a desire that , at least , my state with the King might be brought to an explicit point ? —that I could no longer remain in the dark , concerning a thing upon which all my ...
Página 45
... favour was to be merited by virtue . Our allies must be supported : if one wheel stopped , all might . He had unlearned his juvenile errors , and thought no longer that England could do all by itself . He ended with a mention of peace ...
... favour was to be merited by virtue . Our allies must be supported : if one wheel stopped , all might . He had unlearned his juvenile errors , and thought no longer that England could do all by itself . He ended with a mention of peace ...
Página 47
... favour of the author , that although he evinces no close or sustained acquaintance- ship with the interior of ancient society , ( and who is there that can , unless it be when such dramatic powers and appreciation of human nature , in ...
... favour of the author , that although he evinces no close or sustained acquaintance- ship with the interior of ancient society , ( and who is there that can , unless it be when such dramatic powers and appreciation of human nature , in ...
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admiration Anglo-Saxon Language animal appear beautiful Belfegor Beowulf Buenos Ayres called character circumstances civilization colour course death earth England English fact father favour feelings friends Frisland ground habits hand head heart honour hope human inhabitants interest kind King knowledge labour land less letter light London look Lord Lord Brougham Lord Glenelg Lord Melbourne Louis the Fourteenth Madagascar Majesty manner Mazarin Meeta ment mind moral Mount Gerizim nation native nature never noble observed occasion opinion Paraguay particular party passage passed persons Pitt possessed present principles prison Radama readers regard remarkable respect river Russia scenes seems seen sentiments South America South Australia speak specimen spirit taste Tatar Tee-totalism thee things thou thought tion travellers ukase volume whole wild young Zealand