History of England from the Peace of Utrecht to the Peace of Versailles: 1713-1783J. Murray, 1838 |
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... manner highly to his own honour ..... We honour his candour , integrity , and fair dealing ..... Every intelligent and well - read student will derive both information and pleasure from the perusal of his volumes . " - ECLECTIC REVIEW ...
... manner highly to his own honour ..... We honour his candour , integrity , and fair dealing ..... Every intelligent and well - read student will derive both information and pleasure from the perusal of his volumes . " - ECLECTIC REVIEW ...
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... manner in which Dr. Davy has performed his task is highly creditable to his talents and learning . The important documents too , which he has published for the first time , are highly valuable ; and enable us to form a more correct ...
... manner in which Dr. Davy has performed his task is highly creditable to his talents and learning . The important documents too , which he has published for the first time , are highly valuable ; and enable us to form a more correct ...
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... manners , customs , and general condition of the Norwegians , this work of Mr. Laing's surpasses , we think , any that has yet appeared on the same subject . We ourselves have certainly met with no work capable of affording so complete ...
... manners , customs , and general condition of the Norwegians , this work of Mr. Laing's surpasses , we think , any that has yet appeared on the same subject . We ourselves have certainly met with no work capable of affording so complete ...
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... manner to the medical public . Many examples , which we might enumerate , shew how important it is that the investigation of medical plants should be taken up by some one fully qualified for the execution of so difficult a task . No one ...
... manner to the medical public . Many examples , which we might enumerate , shew how important it is that the investigation of medical plants should be taken up by some one fully qualified for the execution of so difficult a task . No one ...
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... manner in which the authoress introduces the ideas and associations that in so many instances are inseparably connected with our indigenous forest trees . " MAGAZINE OF NATURAL HISTORY . JOANNA BAILLIE'S POEMS , & c . New DRAMAS , 3 ...
... manner in which the authoress introduces the ideas and associations that in so many instances are inseparably connected with our indigenous forest trees . " MAGAZINE OF NATURAL HISTORY . JOANNA BAILLIE'S POEMS , & c . New DRAMAS , 3 ...
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History of England from the Peace of Utrecht to the Peace of ..., Volum 2 Earl Philip Henry Stanhope Stanhope Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1839 |
History of England from the Peace of Utrecht to the Peace of ..., Volum 2 Earl Philip Henry Stanhope Stanhope Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1839 |
History of England from the Peace of Utrecht to the Peace of ..., Volum 2 Earl Philip Henry Stanhope Stanhope Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1839 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
66 CHAP affairs afterwards answer appeared Bill Bishop Atterbury Bolingbroke Carteret Chesterfield Church cloth lettered Court Coxe's Walpole death declared DISM Duchess of Kendal Duke of Newcastle Duke of Wharton Earl Edition Emperor England English Excise favour Fleury foreign France friends George Gibraltar Government hand Hanover Hist honour hopes Horace Walpole House of Commons Inverness Jacobites James King King's Lady less Lockhart Lord Midleton Lord Townshend Madame de Prie Madrid Majesty Memoirs ment METHO minister nation never observed occasion opposition Ostend Company Paris Parliament party passed persons Pope present Pretender Prince proposed Pulteney qu'il Queen received Ripperda Royal says scarcely Schaub scheme Secretary seems sent Sir Robert Sir William Wyndham South Sea South Sea Company Spain Spanish speech spirit Sunderland Swift thing thought Tories treaty treaty of Hanover TURE Vienna Walpole's Wesley Whigs William Stanhope writes Wyndham
Populære avsnitt
Side 346 - ... their manner of writing is very peculiar, being neither from the left to the right, like the Europeans ; nor from the right to the left, like the Arabians ; nor from up to down, like the Chinese ; but aslant, from one corner of the paper to the other, like ladies in England.