London Magazine Enlarged and Improved, Volum 26C. Ackers, 1757 |
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Side 6
... obliged to give over . right hand , holding the knife wherewith Then the clerk remonstrating to him , that he coinmitted the aforesaid parricide , shall lhe indignation of the people was a judg- be scorched and burned with flaming ...
... obliged to give over . right hand , holding the knife wherewith Then the clerk remonstrating to him , that he coinmitted the aforesaid parricide , shall lhe indignation of the people was a judg- be scorched and burned with flaming ...
Side 10
... obliged , as his majefty's fubjects , to af- femble and march to the affiftance of the civil officer ; but I am fure it would be C much better and fafer to have them affem- ble and march , upon fuch an occafion , under the command of ...
... obliged , as his majefty's fubjects , to af- femble and march to the affiftance of the civil officer ; but I am fure it would be C much better and fafer to have them affem- ble and march , upon fuch an occafion , under the command of ...
Side 13
... I do not in the leaft queftion : Our being obliged to make ufe of the military for protecting the prefs- gangs , is a plain proof of it ; and I must obferve , that it is a very fubtle diftinction of 14 Account of the Loss of OSWEGO . of ...
... I do not in the leaft queftion : Our being obliged to make ufe of the military for protecting the prefs- gangs , is a plain proof of it ; and I must obferve , that it is a very fubtle diftinction of 14 Account of the Loss of OSWEGO . of ...
Side 19
... obliged to keep the troops at home , which they had railed by orders from hence , that they might be in readiness to join the body of troops which they were made to expect from Great - Bri- tain , but which never arrived ; and the ...
... obliged to keep the troops at home , which they had railed by orders from hence , that they might be in readiness to join the body of troops which they were made to expect from Great - Bri- tain , but which never arrived ; and the ...
Side 20
... obliged to Urbano Cerri , who , in his ftate of the Romish church , always fpeaks of them as unclean beasts ; and in his eulogium on pope Innocent XI . for his zealous perfecution of heretics , he intro duces fome fervent exhortations ...
... obliged to Urbano Cerri , who , in his ftate of the Romish church , always fpeaks of them as unclean beasts ; and in his eulogium on pope Innocent XI . for his zealous perfecution of heretics , he intro duces fome fervent exhortations ...
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Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
admiral Byng affiftance againſt alfo anfwer army becauſe bill cafe capt caufe confequence confiderable courfe court defign defire ditto electorate of Hanover enemy expence fafe faid fame feamen fecond fecurity feems fent ferve fervice feven feveral fhall fhips fhould fide fince fire firft fleet foldiers fome foon fpirit fquadron France French ftate ftill fubject fuch fuffered fufficient fupply fuppofe fupport fure garrifon Great-Britain guns honour houfe houſe ibid intereft John king of Pruffia laft land late leaft lefs London LONDON MAGAZINE lord majefty majefty's March meaſures ment Mifs minifters Minorca moft moſt muft muſt nation neceffary neral obferved occafion officers paffed parliament perfon pleafed poffible prefent preferve propofed Pruffian publick purpoſe reafon rectory refolution refolved ſhall thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe thro tion treaty troops weft whofe wounded
Populære avsnitt
Side 404 - How sleep the brave, who sink to rest, By all their country's wishes blest ! When Spring, with dewy fingers cold, Returns to deck their hallowed mould, She there shall dress a sweeter sod Than Fancy's feet have ever trod. By fairy hands their knell is rung ; By forms unseen their dirge is sung : There Honour comes, a pilgrim gray, To bless the turf that wraps their clay ; And Freedom shall awhile repair, To dwell a weeping hermit there ! TO MERCY.
Side 41 - His majefty went to the , houfe of peers, and gave ' the royal aflent to the following bills, viz.
Side 92 - Thy banks ? — alas, is this the boafted fcene, This dreary, wide, uncultivated plain, Where fick'ning Nature wears a fainter green, And Defolation fpreads her torpid reign ? Is this the fcene where Freedom breath'd, Her copious horn where Plenty wreath'd. And health at opening day Bade all her rofeate breezes fly, To wake the fons of Induftry, And make their fields more gay?
Side 56 - Then a fresh murmur through the rabble ran ; Boys, girls, wives, widows, all attack the man. " Sure never was brute beast so void of nature ! Have you no pity for the pretty creature ? To your own baby can you be unkind ? Here...
Side 24 - May of life. / am now passed from the spring to the autumn of my days, but I am without those comforts that should succeed the sprightliness of bloom, and support me in this melancholy season.
Side 103 - Jews," 1757 ; and the following rules for all who dissented from Warburton are deduced : — " You must not write on the same subject that he does. You must not glance at his arguments, even without naming him or so much as referring to him. If you find his reasonings ever so faulty, you must not presume...
Side 198 - And winding vallies with the various notes Of pipe, sheep, kine, and birds, and liquid brooks, Unite their echoes : near at hand the wide Majestic wave of Severn slowly rolls Along the deep-divided glebe : the flood And trading bark with low contracted sail, Linger among the reeds and copsy banks To listen, and to view the joyous scene.
Side 95 - Trace through her every scene of life, View her as widow, virgin, wife; Still the same humble she appears, The same in youth, the same in years; The same in low and high estate, Ne'er vex'd with this, or mov'd with that. Go, ladies, now, and if you'd be As fair, as great, as good as she, Go learn of her humility.
Side 146 - ... honour, and my country's fervice. I am forry that my endeavours were not attended with more fuccefs ; and that the armament, under my command, proved too weak to fucceed in an expedition of fuch moment. Truth has prevailed over calumny and falfehood, and juftice has wiped off the ignominious ftain of my fuppofed want of perfonal courage, and the charge of difaffection.
Side 299 - Say, here he gives too little — there too much : Destroy all creatures for thy sport or gust, Yet cry, if man's unhappy, God's unjust ; If man alone engross not Heaven's high care, Alone made perfect here, immortal there: Snatch from his hand the balance and the rod, Rejudge his justice, be the god of GOD.