The Quarterly Review, Volume 19William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) John Murray, 1818 - English literature |
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Page 45
... mind as well in form and features , highly accomplished , of a fine understanding , studious and yet unaffectedly humble , pious , cheer- ful , affectionate , in disposition like an angel . She was a little miracle , says her father ...
... mind as well in form and features , highly accomplished , of a fine understanding , studious and yet unaffectedly humble , pious , cheer- ful , affectionate , in disposition like an angel . She was a little miracle , says her father ...
Page 53
... mind . Survives all meaner things . No change of fashion , no alteration of taste , no revolutions of science have impaired or can impair his celebrity . Satire , from which nothing is sacred , scarcely attempted to touch him while ...
... mind . Survives all meaner things . No change of fashion , no alteration of taste , no revolutions of science have impaired or can impair his celebrity . Satire , from which nothing is sacred , scarcely attempted to touch him while ...
Page 54
... mind , as containing nothing but what is imitable and nothing but what is good . All persons , indeed , may find in his character something for imitation ; but for an English gentleman he is the perfect model . Neither to solicit public ...
... mind , as containing nothing but what is imitable and nothing but what is good . All persons , indeed , may find in his character something for imitation ; but for an English gentleman he is the perfect model . Neither to solicit public ...
Page 57
... mind as to the preference which he ought to assign to the condition of the English labourer or that of the Virginian slave - to the most wretched of our paupers , or to the happy negro ; and , wonderful to relate , finally decides in ...
... mind as to the preference which he ought to assign to the condition of the English labourer or that of the Virginian slave - to the most wretched of our paupers , or to the happy negro ; and , wonderful to relate , finally decides in ...
Page 66
... mind the noble example of forbearance set by our venerable sovereign , at the close of the former contest , on the occasion of the first audience of Mr. Adams . I perceive , Mr. Adams , ' said the King , that you are a little agitated ...
... mind the noble example of forbearance set by our venerable sovereign , at the close of the former contest , on the occasion of the first audience of Mr. Adams . I perceive , Mr. Adams , ' said the King , that you are a little agitated ...
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