The Quarterly Review, Volume 102William 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, 1857 |
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Pagina 93
... eyes , and in the eyes of all who in any degree shared their opinions , assumed a paramount degree of importance . In order to promote religion , they held that the Church required renovating and strengthening ; to breathe life into the ...
... eyes , and in the eyes of all who in any degree shared their opinions , assumed a paramount degree of importance . In order to promote religion , they held that the Church required renovating and strengthening ; to breathe life into the ...
Pagina 118
... eyes to see to read . It is not unusual to ornament the walls with scrolls that teach thee to live and to die . ' To this we can see no objection . Such a warning may occasionally arrest a wandering eye , or at a critical moment impress ...
... eyes to see to read . It is not unusual to ornament the walls with scrolls that teach thee to live and to die . ' To this we can see no objection . Such a warning may occasionally arrest a wandering eye , or at a critical moment impress ...
Pagina 143
... eyes of each other : - the ' The Europeans who go to China are disposed to think the inhabit- ants of the Celestial Empire odd and ridiculous ; the Chinese who visit Canton and Macao return the compliment . They exhaust their caustic ...
... eyes of each other : - the ' The Europeans who go to China are disposed to think the inhabit- ants of the Celestial Empire odd and ridiculous ; the Chinese who visit Canton and Macao return the compliment . They exhaust their caustic ...
Inhoudsopgave
History of the Irish PoorLaw in connexion with | 59 |
British Tea Plantations in the Himalaya with a Nar | 126 |
Prælectiones Academicæ Oxonii habitæ A Joanne | 204 |
Copyright | |
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Achilles admirable adultery Agamemnon Aleppo ambassador ancient Andromache appears Arabs authority Baghdad beauty Bedouins Bishop Bishop Burnet boys British Busino called canal cause century character Christian Church clergy colour construction Cornish Cornwall court Deiphobus desert Diomed divine divorce effect engine England English Euphrates evil favour feeling George Stephenson give Government Greek hand Hector Helen Homer honour husband Iliad India King labour less living London Lord Lord Dufferin Lord Palmerston marriage master means Menelaus ment Mesopotamia miles mind moral Mount's Bay nation native nature never object observed once Paris parish passed persons picture political preaching present Priam question racter railway re-marriage remarkable rendered river Rugby says scarcely Scripture seems sermons spirit thought Tigris tion tribes Trojan Ulysses whole wife woman words