Quarterly Review, Volumes 106-107J. Murray., 1859 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 8
... once driven by the plague to the Low Countries and to Orleans . During one of these ex- cursions he made an acquaintance , through Battus , a man of letters , with Anna Bersala , Marchioness of Vere , who lived in the Cas- tle of ...
... once driven by the plague to the Low Countries and to Orleans . During one of these ex- cursions he made an acquaintance , through Battus , a man of letters , with Anna Bersala , Marchioness of Vere , who lived in the Cas- tle of ...
Page 11
... once narrowly escaped with his life . From Bologna he removed to Venice , to print a new edition of his Adagia ' at the famous Aldine Press . He became very intimate with the Aldi : his enemies after- wards reproached him as having ...
... once narrowly escaped with his life . From Bologna he removed to Venice , to print a new edition of his Adagia ' at the famous Aldine Press . He became very intimate with the Aldi : his enemies after- wards reproached him as having ...
Page 14
... Once free , and now re- leased by Papal authority from his vows of seclusion in the monastery of his Order , he would not submit to the irksome impri- sonment of a cloister . He had refused all preferment which bound him to residence ...
... Once free , and now re- leased by Papal authority from his vows of seclusion in the monastery of his Order , he would not submit to the irksome impri- sonment of a cloister . He had refused all preferment which bound him to residence ...
Page 27
... once the most adula- tory invitations and the most bitter re- proaches . The extreme Reformers taunt- ed him as a cowardly apostate , the Ro- manists as a cowardly hypocrite . Neither party would believe that a man might with reason ...
... once the most adula- tory invitations and the most bitter re- proaches . The extreme Reformers taunt- ed him as a cowardly apostate , the Ro- manists as a cowardly hypocrite . Neither party would believe that a man might with reason ...
Page 39
... once . The facts were these . A man named Innes had effected a policy for 1000l . on the life of his stepdaughter . She died under tragical and suspicious circumstances , and Innes produced a will , which appeared on the face of it to ...
... once . The facts were these . A man named Innes had effected a policy for 1000l . on the life of his stepdaughter . She died under tragical and suspicious circumstances , and Innes produced a will , which appeared on the face of it to ...
Contents
51 | |
52 | |
54 | |
55 | |
58 | |
109 | |
112 | |
123 | |
157 | |
181 | |
185 | |
193 | |
244 | |
264 | |
290 | |
293 | |
294 | |
iii | |
1 | |
21 | |
32 | |
130 | |
136 | |
141 | |
155 | |
160 | |
212 | |
241 | |
243 | |
244 | |
276 | |
277 | |
279 | |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
amongst appear architecture Australia beauty believe Berkshire boroughs called capital century character Châteaubriand Christian church colony cottage Court Cowper district Donnington Castle doubt Duke early England English equal Erasmus existence fact favour feeling franchise French friends give Government Greek Hadrian hand honour important interest invention islands King labour Lancashire land less letters living London Lord Lord Elgin Lord John Russell Madame Madame Récamier masters means ment miles mind miracles moral native nature never once original Parliament passed Peiho period persons poet population possession present probably province R. I. Murchison race racter Récamier religious remarkable rocks Roman says Scotland seems Shechem side Silurian South Wales species spirit strike Tahiti Tientsin tion town trade tribes truth Vallum wages wall whole Zealand