The New Monthly Magazine and Literary Journal, Volume 32Henry Colburn and Company, 1831 - English literature |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 41
Page
... Greek Affray at Smyrna Sketches of the Scottish Bar.-No. III . Mr. Forsythe The French Ministry and the New Chamber Gossipings , Gay and Grave . By a retired Londoner Song for Music The Month in Parliament . County - Division Clause ...
... Greek Affray at Smyrna Sketches of the Scottish Bar.-No. III . Mr. Forsythe The French Ministry and the New Chamber Gossipings , Gay and Grave . By a retired Londoner Song for Music The Month in Parliament . County - Division Clause ...
Page 49
... Greek war ; the piracies long exercised in all parts of the Archipelago ; the impoverishment of the Eastern countries on the Mediterranean ; bad crops of cotton in Egypt , and other circumstances , had held the trade of Marseilles ...
... Greek war ; the piracies long exercised in all parts of the Archipelago ; the impoverishment of the Eastern countries on the Mediterranean ; bad crops of cotton in Egypt , and other circumstances , had held the trade of Marseilles ...
Page 59
... Greeks , and Cicero among the Romans ; Homer was a self - taught poet ; and Shakspeare , and Cervantes , Milton , and Moliere , were self - taught ; if by the phrase we are to understand that which , if it be not self- taught , is ...
... Greeks , and Cicero among the Romans ; Homer was a self - taught poet ; and Shakspeare , and Cervantes , Milton , and Moliere , were self - taught ; if by the phrase we are to understand that which , if it be not self- taught , is ...
Page 123
... English prizes . But his highest Cambridge honour was his University scholarship , for which he was declared equal with George Long , the able Greek pro- against good men - four Browne's medals and two Chancellor's The New Parliament . 123.
... English prizes . But his highest Cambridge honour was his University scholarship , for which he was declared equal with George Long , the able Greek pro- against good men - four Browne's medals and two Chancellor's The New Parliament . 123.
Page 136
... Greek sailors whom I saw at Alexandria , strongly resembled them in costume and physiognomy . They are conspicuous for their free , uncere monious , and even boisterous manners , so different from the pliant , smooth address of other ...
... Greek sailors whom I saw at Alexandria , strongly resembled them in costume and physiognomy . They are conspicuous for their free , uncere monious , and even boisterous manners , so different from the pliant , smooth address of other ...
Contents
13 | |
20 | |
26 | |
75 | |
81 | |
97 | |
107 | |
129 | |
154 | |
162 | |
254 | |
264 | |
271 | |
279 | |
312 | |
320 | |
327 | |
336 | |
445 | |
455 | |
462 | |
468 | |
500 | |
507 | |
523 | |
571 | |
587 | |
601 | |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
admiration appear aristocracy Arnaud du Tilh beautiful Bertrand better called character Charlotte Lennox Chateaubriand Cholera Church death effect eloquence England English excited eyes favour feeling France French genius gentleman give Government grace hand heard heart honour House of Commons House of Lords interest Ireland Irish King labour lady less literary living look Lord Althorp Lord Brougham Lord Castlereagh Lord Grey Lord John Russell Margaret means mind Ministers moral nation nature never noble Nugent observed once opinion orator Parliament party passed passion Peers perhaps persons pleasure poem poet poetry political poor popular present principles reader Reform Bill remarkable respect Russia scarcely seems society speak speech spirit Sunderland supposed talent taste thing thou thought tion tone truth voice Whigs whole Windham words writer young