The Quarterly Review, Volumen19William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1819 |
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Página 14
... fact instead of fable , would have been less remarkable than the actual and as yet unexplained phenomenon of its colour at Geneva . Adultery was then punished with death in that city . Among other military exercises , he saw huge ...
... fact instead of fable , would have been less remarkable than the actual and as yet unexplained phenomenon of its colour at Geneva . Adultery was then punished with death in that city . Among other military exercises , he saw huge ...
Página 48
... facts and observations in this his favourite pursuit ; and thinking with Erasmus , that ut homines , ita libros , indies ... fact analogous to the increased bulk and muscular strength of those persons who have lost both their legs . Cups ...
... facts and observations in this his favourite pursuit ; and thinking with Erasmus , that ut homines , ita libros , indies ... fact analogous to the increased bulk and muscular strength of those persons who have lost both their legs . Cups ...
Página 57
... fact , that severe masters seldom suffer from their slaves ' resentment .'- -PP . 11 , 12 . At Petersburgh our travellers embark on board the steam - boat which plies between Norfolk and Richmond , and which is thus de- scribed : The ...
... fact , that severe masters seldom suffer from their slaves ' resentment .'- -PP . 11 , 12 . At Petersburgh our travellers embark on board the steam - boat which plies between Norfolk and Richmond , and which is thus de- scribed : The ...
Página 59
... fact , a migrating people ; they have few or none of those local at- tachments and fixed habits , which make it in Europe so painful a task to separate from those objects which time and memory have endeared . We are told , that not ...
... fact , a migrating people ; they have few or none of those local at- tachments and fixed habits , which make it in Europe so painful a task to separate from those objects which time and memory have endeared . We are told , that not ...
Página 73
... fact , we suspect , is that simpletons do not flock quite so readily as he expected to the ' Paradise thus opened for them in the wild ; ' he is evidently alarmed , therefore , lest he should be left to the solitary enjoyment of his own ...
... fact , we suspect , is that simpletons do not flock quite so readily as he expected to the ' Paradise thus opened for them in the wild ; ' he is evidently alarmed , therefore , lest he should be left to the solitary enjoyment of his own ...
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