The Quarterly Review, Volumen16John Murray, 1817 |
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Página 259
... living and fattening upon the public spoil , must either be grossly ignorant , or wicked enough to employ arguments which they know to be false . The emoluments of office almost in every department of the state , and especially in all ...
... living and fattening upon the public spoil , must either be grossly ignorant , or wicked enough to employ arguments which they know to be false . The emoluments of office almost in every department of the state , and especially in all ...
Página 261
... living under a free government , and that their freedom is in no danger , an opinion which , if it conti- nues , to use the very oracular words , bids fair to naturalize among us even now the worst abuses of foreign despotisms ...
... living under a free government , and that their freedom is in no danger , an opinion which , if it conti- nues , to use the very oracular words , bids fair to naturalize among us even now the worst abuses of foreign despotisms ...
Página 262
... living , would throw his weight into the popular scale ! At home and abroad , ' the Oracle tells us , we are in profound peace ; ' and it adds , now then let us , instead of crouching before domestic oppression , bethink us in good ...
... living , would throw his weight into the popular scale ! At home and abroad , ' the Oracle tells us , we are in profound peace ; ' and it adds , now then let us , instead of crouching before domestic oppression , bethink us in good ...
Página 264
... living inoffensively and industriously in small communities . A religious influence has pre- vailed in all these instances , -Lycurgus could not have succeeded without the assistance of Apollo , and Mango Capac was the son of the sun ...
... living inoffensively and industriously in small communities . A religious influence has pre- vailed in all these instances , -Lycurgus could not have succeeded without the assistance of Apollo , and Mango Capac was the son of the sun ...
Página 266
... living in . But how is this mighty work to be done ? I answer it must be done at once . For the public mind being suitably prepared by my little tracts , a few contiguous pa- rishes have only to declare the land to be theirs , and form ...
... living in . But how is this mighty work to be done ? I answer it must be done at once . For the public mind being suitably prepared by my little tracts , a few contiguous pa- rishes have only to declare the land to be theirs , and form ...
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ancient Anne Plumptre appears Arabs Brazil Buonaparte Buonaparte's called camels Captain cause character Childe Harold circumstances civil coast Desert discovery effect Emperor England English existence favour feeling feet France French Friendly Banks Fur Trade garden give hands honour Hudson Lowe Hudson's Bay Hudson's Bay Company human hundred Indians inhabitants interest island king Koster labour land latitude leagues Legh letter Lord Byron Lord Selkirk Mamelukes mankind manner means ment mind Miss Plumptre Mogadore moral natives nature never North-west Company Nubia object observed opinion Parish passage Pernambuco persons poem poet political poor possession present principle racter readers received Recife remarkable Riley river savage saved says seems shew ship Sidi Hamet society Spencean Philanthropists spirit Strait Sumner supposed surprize Temple thing thought tion Tombuctoo travellers truth voyage whole