Quarterly Review, Volume 82John Murray, 1848 - English literature |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 58
Page 40
... evidence which this prevailing indulgence affords of its being ever in his mind who it is that is addressing the public , whether in solemn text or sportive or pensive annota- tion . He never , it is clear , forgets either his own past ...
... evidence which this prevailing indulgence affords of its being ever in his mind who it is that is addressing the public , whether in solemn text or sportive or pensive annota- tion . He never , it is clear , forgets either his own past ...
Page 62
... evidence , Mr. Addison since the marriage has been guilty of incest with the sister of Mrs. Addison . Reconciliation is impossible . She cannot forgive him , and return to his house , without herself being guilty of incest . Had this ...
... evidence , Mr. Addison since the marriage has been guilty of incest with the sister of Mrs. Addison . Reconciliation is impossible . She cannot forgive him , and return to his house , without herself being guilty of incest . Had this ...
Page 63
... evidence attentively , and in a succinct but masterly state- ment he gave an abstract of it to prove that the claimant was indeed the genuine issue of Lady Jane and her husband , -dexterously repelling the objections to the claim , and ...
... evidence attentively , and in a succinct but masterly state- ment he gave an abstract of it to prove that the claimant was indeed the genuine issue of Lady Jane and her husband , -dexterously repelling the objections to the claim , and ...
Page 102
... evidence , that no two are in their right chronological places . It is the same with all the rest . Wherever there is any- thing like a series , they will be found to stand in the most flagrant and absurd disorder , and in some cases to ...
... evidence , that no two are in their right chronological places . It is the same with all the rest . Wherever there is any- thing like a series , they will be found to stand in the most flagrant and absurd disorder , and in some cases to ...
Page 104
... evidence that Mrs. Clayton's re- markable favour began soon after her introduction to the Princess -at least as early as 1717 - and therefore probably long before the appearance of the disease of which , twenty years later , the Queen ...
... evidence that Mrs. Clayton's re- markable favour began soon after her introduction to the Princess -at least as early as 1717 - and therefore probably long before the appearance of the disease of which , twenty years later , the Queen ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
ancient appear artillery battalions believe bill Bishop called century Chancellor character Church colour Count Montholon Court doubt Duke duty editor effect England English existence favour feeling Ferdinand Flocon France Frederick French friends gentlemen give Government Guard hand honour hope Horace Walpole House ichthyosaur improvement interest Ireland Irish Italy justice King labour Lady land landlords Layamon Ledru-Rollin less letters Lord Campbell Lord Hervey Lord John Russell Louis Blanc Louis Philippe LXXXII Majesty means ment mind minister Montholon National nature never observed occasion opinion parish Parliament party perhaps person poem Pope present Prince Princess prison Queen Queen Caroline readers remarkable respect Royal Scotland seems Sir Hudson Lowe Sir Robert society species spirit supposed thought tion told trade varnish Voltaire Walpole Whig whole words