The Quarterly Review, Volum 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 |
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Side 20
... considerable improvement . Some curious facts in the history of horticulture are found in his Acetaria . It was scarcely an hundred years , he tells us , since cabbages were introduced from Holland into this country , one of the Sir ...
... considerable improvement . Some curious facts in the history of horticulture are found in his Acetaria . It was scarcely an hundred years , he tells us , since cabbages were introduced from Holland into this country , one of the Sir ...
Side 28
... considerable progress in Comenius's Janua ; began himselfe to write legibly , and had a strong passion for Greeke . The number of verses he could recite was prodi- gious , and what he remember'd of the parts of playes , which he would ...
... considerable progress in Comenius's Janua ; began himselfe to write legibly , and had a strong passion for Greeke . The number of verses he could recite was prodi- gious , and what he remember'd of the parts of playes , which he would ...
Side 36
... considerable refreshment for the comfort of these poor creatures , the sick and wounded seamen under mine inspection through all the ports of my district . ' His letters strongly express his feelings at this dreadful time , and shew ...
... considerable refreshment for the comfort of these poor creatures , the sick and wounded seamen under mine inspection through all the ports of my district . ' His letters strongly express his feelings at this dreadful time , and shew ...
Side 57
... considerable struggle with himself in making up his 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 ...
... considerable struggle with himself in making up his 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 ...
Side 85
... considerable demand : he , however , who should expect this , must be a sturdy believer in the perfectibility of women ; and indeed , in general , the demand which ceases in one quarter is only transferred to another , and the same ...
... considerable demand : he , however , who should expect this , must be a sturdy believer in the perfectibility of women ; and indeed , in general , the demand which ceases in one quarter is only transferred to another , and the same ...
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