| Richard Baxter - 1766 - 496 pagina’s
...at the frontifpeice of this hiftory ; fince we believed he would moft readily commute for the defedt of a myftery fo vulgar, to be gratified with another...you of a graving, without a graver, burin, point, or aquafortis ; and yet is THIS performed without the affiftance of either. That what gives our moft perite... | |
| 1828 - 442 pagina’s
...miniatures." v. ii. p. 164, 8vo. " Nor may I, without extraordinary ingratitude, conceal that illustrious name, which did communicate it to me ; nor the obligation...which the curious have to that heroic person, who was pleased to impart it to the world, though by so incompetent an instrument." Sculpture, p. 145. And... | |
| Eliot Warburton (i.e. Bartholomew Elliott George) - 1849 - 622 pagina’s
...by none been ever published. Nor may I, without extraordinary ingratitude conceal that illustrious name which did communicate it to me ; nor the obligation...which the curious have to that heroic person who was pleased to impart it to the world, though by so incompetent and unworthy an instrument. It would appear... | |
| Horace Walpole (4th earl of Orford.) - 1849 - 466 pagina’s
...miniatures." (Vol. ii. p. 164, 8vo.) " Nor may I, without extraordinary ingratitude, conceal that illustrious name, which did communicate it to me ; nor the obligation...which the curious have to that heroic person, who was pleased to impart it to the world, though Ъу во incompetent an instrument."— Snilptura, p. 145.... | |
| 1849 - 466 pagina’s
...miniatures." (Vol. ii. p. 164, 8vo.) " Nor may I, without extraordinary ingratitude, conceal that illustrious name, which did communicate it to me ; nor the obligation...which the curious have to that heroic person, who was pleased to impart it to the world, though by so incompetent an instrument."— Sculptura, p. 145. 2... | |
| Bartholomew Elliott G. Warburton - 1849 - 604 pagina’s
...by none been ever published. Nor may I, without extraordinary ingratitude conceal that illustrious name which did communicate it to me; nor the obligation...which the curious have to that heroic person who was pleased to impart it to the world, though by so incompetent and unworthy an instrument. It would appear... | |
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