The literary history of Galloway

Front Cover
 

Selected pages

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Popular passages

Page 5 - Sharbil, a document which was written probably at the end of the fourth or beginning of the fifth century and...
Page 227 - Most authors close their lives in apathy or despair, and too many live by means which few of them would not blush to describe.
Page 246 - I have not been free from follies and errors. But the tenor of my life has been temperate, laborious, humble, quiet, and, to the utmost of my power, beneficent. I can prove the general tenor of my writings to have been candid, and ever adapted to exhibit the most favourable views of the abilities, dispositions, and exertions of others. " For these last ten months I have been brought to the very extremity of bodily and pecuniary distress. " I shudder at the thought of perishing in a jail. " 92 Chancery-lane,...
Page 145 - ... from house to house, to teach as much in the schools, and spend as much time with the students and young men in fitting them for the ministry, as if he had been sequestered from all the world besides ; and yet withal to write as much as if he had been constantly shut up in his study.
Page 338 - Edinburgh having comprehended them all. The 'London Review,' the 'Agricultural Magazine,' the 'Anti-Jacobin Review,' the 'Monthly Magazine,' the ' Universal Magazine,' the ' Public Characters,' the 'Annual Necrology,' with several other periodical works, contain many of my communications In such of those publications as have been reviewed, I can show that my anonymous pieces have been distinguished with very high praise. I have written also a short system of Chemistry, in one volume 8vo ; and I published...
Page 160 - With them each day was holy, every hour They stood prepared to die — a people doomed To death, old men and youths and simple maids.
Page 232 - When a true genius appears in the world, you may know him by this sign, that the dunces are all in confederacy against him.
Page 142 - ... one of the most moving and affectionate preachers in his time, or perhaps in any age of the church...
Page 153 - I shall not cease to pray for a blessing to these lands, to his majesty and the government, and the inferior magistrates thereof, but especially to the land of my nativity."* The last part of his sentence was not put in execution.
Page 82 - because it was thought unreasonable to oblige a reverend prelate of his years to live among such a rebellious and turbulent people...

Bibliographic information