Essays, Critical and Miscellaneous, Volume 1 |
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Page 11
... Prince of Orange would ever have been invited over . Our ancestors , we suppose , knew their own meaning . And , if we may believe them , their hostility was primarily not to popery , but to tyranny . They did not drive out a tyrant be ...
... Prince of Orange would ever have been invited over . Our ancestors , we suppose , knew their own meaning . And , if we may believe them , their hostility was primarily not to popery , but to tyranny . They did not drive out a tyrant be ...
Page 20
... Prince is so severely censured is more or be possible to find , in all the many volumes of his compositions , a single expression indi- cating that dissimulation and treachery had ever struck him as discreditable . It is indeed scarcely ...
... Prince is so severely censured is more or be possible to find , in all the many volumes of his compositions , a single expression indi- cating that dissimulation and treachery had ever struck him as discreditable . It is indeed scarcely ...
Page 28
... Prince Hal , and to have made Dogberry and Verges retort on each other in sparkling epigrams . But he knew , to use his own admirable language , that such indiscriminate prodigality was " from the purpose of playing , whose end , both ...
... Prince Hal , and to have made Dogberry and Verges retort on each other in sparkling epigrams . But he knew , to use his own admirable language , that such indiscriminate prodigality was " from the purpose of playing , whose end , both ...
Page 29
... prince is established solely by the comparison of who governed his employers , of the favourite hands . Our suspicions are strengthened by the who governed the prince , and of the lacquey circumstance , that the same manuscript con- who ...
... prince is established solely by the comparison of who governed his employers , of the favourite hands . Our suspicions are strengthened by the who governed the prince , and of the lacquey circumstance , that the same manuscript con- who ...
Page 30
... Prince , and perhaps also from some indistinct unarmed people by thousands in the caverns traditions , several writers have supposed a con- to which they had fled for safety . Such were nection between those remarkable men much the ...
... Prince , and perhaps also from some indistinct unarmed people by thousands in the caverns traditions , several writers have supposed a con- to which they had fled for safety . Such were nection between those remarkable men much the ...
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Common terms and phrases
absurd admiration ancient appeared army Bacon better Catholic century character Charles Church Church of England Church of Rome civil Clive court defend doctrines Dupleix EDINBURGH REVIEW effect eminent enemies England English Europe evil favour feelings France French Gladstone Hampden honour house of Bourbon House of Commons human hundred James judge king liberty lived Long Parliament Lord Lord Byron manner means ment Milton mind minister moral nation nature never noble Novum Organum Omichund opinion Parliament party passed persecution person Petition of Right philosophy Pitt poet poetry political prince principles produced Protestant Protestantism racter readers reason reform reign religion religious respect Revolution Rome scarcely seems Southey sovereign Spain spirit statesmen strong talents temper Temple thing thought thousand Thucydides tion took Tories truth Walpole Whigs whole writer