The Monthly Magazine, Volum 15Sherwood, Gilbert and Piper, 1803 |
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Side 11
... land , however important be the occafion which calls him , fhould his horfe lofe a fhoe , or his carriage break down , he would find it extremely difficult , if not impoffible , to obtain the affitance of a workman . In a capricious and ...
... land , however important be the occafion which calls him , fhould his horfe lofe a fhoe , or his carriage break down , he would find it extremely difficult , if not impoffible , to obtain the affitance of a workman . In a capricious and ...
Side 19
... land , and , in fhort , to con- fine himself to go only once or twice a year to the city to procure fuch things as are ablolutely neceffary . As to the coun- try about Stockholm , we may further re- mark , that it is moftly laid out ...
... land , and , in fhort , to con- fine himself to go only once or twice a year to the city to procure fuch things as are ablolutely neceffary . As to the coun- try about Stockholm , we may further re- mark , that it is moftly laid out ...
Side 32
... land . Such a mode of travelling was become impracticable . I infifted on the permiffion to go by water , and it coft me a month's negociation before I could get this claufe inferted in my firman . The grand vizir put a question , by a ...
... land . Such a mode of travelling was become impracticable . I infifted on the permiffion to go by water , and it coft me a month's negociation before I could get this claufe inferted in my firman . The grand vizir put a question , by a ...
Side 33
... land me at Trebizond . I took with me a time - piece of Louis Ber- thoud , an excellent reflecting circle made by Cit . Lenoir ; a good achromatic tele- kope , compalles , and other neceffary in- Aruments . I had been previously ...
... land me at Trebizond . I took with me a time - piece of Louis Ber- thoud , an excellent reflecting circle made by Cit . Lenoir ; a good achromatic tele- kope , compalles , and other neceffary in- Aruments . I had been previously ...
Side 35
... land . But thou , bleft faint , fo ripe in years and love , To heav'n afcend ; -God calls thee from above . THIS HIS learned and good man was a warm Catholic , the great patron of St. John's College . He was indicted and beheaded , for ...
... land . But thou , bleft faint , fo ripe in years and love , To heav'n afcend ; -God calls thee from above . THIS HIS learned and good man was a warm Catholic , the great patron of St. John's College . He was indicted and beheaded , for ...
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Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
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Populære avsnitt
Side 382 - Behold, thou hast made my days as it were a span long : and mine age is even as nothing in respect of thee ; and verily every man living is altogether vanity.
Side 465 - It is to be remarked, that all this passed loud enough to be overheard by two hundred people who were present ; and I am persuaded that there was not a single person who did not feel the extreme impropriety of his conduct, and the total want of dignity, as well as of decency, on the occasion.
Side 369 - BO, and recover treble the value, one moiety to go to the informer and the other to the poor...
Side 461 - Berlin with respect to the invitation that has been made to it, in consequence of the treaty, to become a guaranteeing Power; the abolition of the Spanish Priories in defiance of the treaty to which the King of Spain was a party; the declaration of the Portuguese Government of their intention to sequestrate the property of the Portuguese Priory, as forming a part of the Spanish Langue, unless the property of the Spanish Priories...
Side 466 - Europe as far as might be in his power, was willing to have waived the pretensions he might have a right to advance of this nature; and as the other articles of the Definitive Treaty have been in a course of execution on his part, so he would have been ready to have carried into...
Side 527 - States, for the fpace of three years from this time, to depofit their merchandizes and effeds in the port of New Orleans, and to export them from thence without paying any other duty than a fair price for the hire of the ftores ; and his Majefty promifes, either to continue this permiflion, if he .finds during...
Side 2 - The next morning, I breakfasted with the Doctor, when he said he had never before been so sensible of the power of a good conscience...
Side 272 - Commons, that, as very considerable military preparations were carrying on in the ports of France and Holland, he had judged it expedient to adopt additional measures of precaution for the security of his dominions.
Side 337 - ... my door, when I came home from the coronation. It was torn by the wind at the same time that the signal was given to the Tower that he was crowned.
Side 466 - ... the nature of the compact itself, the other party has a right, according to the law of nations, to interfere for the purpose of obtaining satisfaction or compensation for any essential difference which such acts may have subsequently made in their relative situation ; that if there ever was a case to which this principle might be applied with peculiar propriety, it was that of the late treaty of peace ; for the negotiation was...