The New Monthly Magazine and Literary Journal, Volume 32Henry Colburn and Company, 1831 - English literature |
From inside the book
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Page 11
... opinion is incalculable , and who would , if he were permitted , enter into co - operation with the Go- vernment for ... opinions , and become a powerful expositor of Irish wrongs in the House of Commons . For many years he did not take ...
... opinion is incalculable , and who would , if he were permitted , enter into co - operation with the Go- vernment for ... opinions , and become a powerful expositor of Irish wrongs in the House of Commons . For many years he did not take ...
Page 17
... opinion , is not fatal in more than one in a hundred cases . ' Than this statement nothing can be more satisfactory - nothing more demonstrative in favour of medicinal in- terference . " " Let Nature alone to work its own cures " is the ...
... opinion , is not fatal in more than one in a hundred cases . ' Than this statement nothing can be more satisfactory - nothing more demonstrative in favour of medicinal in- terference . " " Let Nature alone to work its own cures " is the ...
Page 22
... opinion should be now stayed in its course by the faction of Noble and Right Reverend anti - reformers , of which his Royal Highness Ernest Duke of Cumberland is the venerated chieftain . The mighty stream may be here and there impeded ...
... opinion should be now stayed in its course by the faction of Noble and Right Reverend anti - reformers , of which his Royal Highness Ernest Duke of Cumberland is the venerated chieftain . The mighty stream may be here and there impeded ...
Page 23
... opinions . The history of the English Constitution is a series of changes and innovations , the result , not of that ... opinion - and much apprehension having been entertained that their Lordships would be so madly blind to their own ...
... opinions . The history of the English Constitution is a series of changes and innovations , the result , not of that ... opinion - and much apprehension having been entertained that their Lordships would be so madly blind to their own ...
Page 25
... opinion of the necessity of what he called an intimate union and connexion between Church and State , he begged to know precisely what it was that the Noble Lord meant by the ex- pression , which was rather vague and general . If the ...
... opinion of the necessity of what he called an intimate union and connexion between Church and State , he begged to know precisely what it was that the Noble Lord meant by the ex- pression , which was rather vague and general . If the ...
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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