The Scots Magazine, Volum 44Sands, Brymer, Murray and Cochran, 1782 |
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Side 5
... give , and not to re- ceive the law . Yet this was already the disagreeable and alarming confequence of that conceffion : for Ruffia , by a ju- dicious , but unfparing , distribution of prefents amongst the Tartars , and by art- fully ...
... give , and not to re- ceive the law . Yet this was already the disagreeable and alarming confequence of that conceffion : for Ruffia , by a ju- dicious , but unfparing , distribution of prefents amongst the Tartars , and by art- fully ...
Side 13
... give the enemy battle after they had fet out . There were two circumftances which in this cafe rendered the First Lord of the Admiralty highly criminal : one was , that the object of Count de Graffe's expe dition was of the most ...
... give the enemy battle after they had fet out . There were two circumftances which in this cafe rendered the First Lord of the Admiralty highly criminal : one was , that the object of Count de Graffe's expe dition was of the most ...
Side 15
... give him orders to fail to a particular latitude , in order to protect a convoy which had been taken juft feven days before the fri- gate had been dispatched to him : now the probability was , that this frigate could not reach Adm ...
... give him orders to fail to a particular latitude , in order to protect a convoy which had been taken juft feven days before the fri- gate had been dispatched to him : now the probability was , that this frigate could not reach Adm ...
Side 17
... give judgement ; and he trufted that all party - confiderations would be abforbed in the fenfe of their own private honour and confcience ; and that the principle of Mr Grenville's law in the decifion on contefted elections would be ...
... give judgement ; and he trufted that all party - confiderations would be abforbed in the fenfe of their own private honour and confcience ; and that the principle of Mr Grenville's law in the decifion on contefted elections would be ...
Side 20
... give fome expedition - money to builders , and they being enabled to em- ploy more hands , and give better wages , would launch fhips in a very fhort time ; by these means the Shrewsbury had been built and launched in fourteen months ...
... give fome expedition - money to builders , and they being enabled to em- ploy more hands , and give better wages , would launch fhips in a very fhort time ; by these means the Shrewsbury had been built and launched in fourteen months ...
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Populære avsnitt
Side 172 - With mazy error under pendent shades Ran nectar, visiting each plant, and fed Flowers worthy of Paradise, which not nice Art In beds and curious knots, but Nature boon Pour'd forth profuse on hill, and dale, and plain...
Side 63 - He thinks in a peculiar train, and he thinks always as a man of genius; he looks round on Nature and on Life with the eye which Nature bestows only on a poet...
Side 64 - They are, I think, improved in general ; yet I know not whether they have not lost part of what Temple calls their " race ;" a word which, applied to wines in its primitive sense, means the flavour of the soil. " Liberty," when it first appeared, I tried to read, and soon desisted.
Side 187 - That a claim of any body of men, other than the king, lords, and commons of Ireland to make laws to bind this kingdom, is unconstitutional, illegal, and a grievance.
Side 389 - The Judgment of this Court is, and the Court doth award, That you be led back to the place from whence you came, and from thence to be drawn upon a hurdle to the place of execution, and there you...
Side 303 - Having routed professed art, for the modern gardener exerts his talents to conceal his art, Kent, like other reformers, knew not how to stop at the just limits.
Side 301 - No. 173, he banished verdant sculpture, and did not even revert to the square precision of the foregoing age. He enlarged his plans, disdained to make every division tally to its opposite, and though he still adhered much to straight walks with high clipped hedges, they were only his great lines; the rest he diversified by wilderness, and with loose groves of oak, though still within surrounding hedges.
Side 301 - As his reformation gained footing, he ventured farther, and in the royal garden at Richmond dared to introduce cultivated fields, and even morsels of a forest appearance, by the sides of those endless and tiresome walks, that stretched out of one into another without intermission.
Side 169 - Matters, we may well believe, remained long in this situation; and though the generality of mankind form their ideas from the import of words in their own age, we have no reason to think that for many centuries the term garden implied more than a kitchen-garden or orchard.
Side 302 - The sunk fence ascertained the specific garden, but that it might not draw too obvious a line of distinction between the neat and the rude, the contiguous outlying parts came to be included in a kind of general...