The Monthly Review, Or, Literary JournalR. Griffiths, 1822 - Books |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 51
Page 119
Our lives are at your service , but our liberties , we received them from God ; we will not resign them to man . ' The peroration of this exquisite piece of oratory is singu- larly powerful : There is no policy left for Great Britain ...
Our lives are at your service , but our liberties , we received them from God ; we will not resign them to man . ' The peroration of this exquisite piece of oratory is singu- larly powerful : There is no policy left for Great Britain ...
Page 235
He will be received in London with the greatest pleasure , and will experience the best possible treatment . He must not , however , ask permis- sion to come , because that would take up too much time ; but let him give himself up to us ...
He will be received in London with the greatest pleasure , and will experience the best possible treatment . He must not , however , ask permis- sion to come , because that would take up too much time ; but let him give himself up to us ...
Page 385
... or twenty millions , were either levied upon , or paid back in the shape of taxes , by those persons who received the sixty millions then it is evident , that the forty millions being levied upon pro- ducers , the effect of taxation ...
... or twenty millions , were either levied upon , or paid back in the shape of taxes , by those persons who received the sixty millions then it is evident , that the forty millions being levied upon pro- ducers , the effect of taxation ...
What people are saying - Write a review
We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.
Contents
Reids Two Voyages to New South | 7 |
M | 18 |
Johnstones Memoirs of the Rebellion | 36 |
Copyright | |
37 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
animal appears ation called cause character circumstances common consequence consider considerable constitution contains death desire effect England English entirely equal existence expression eyes fact feeling former France French give given hand heart human important increase individual instance interest Ireland island Italy kind King labor land late laws leave less letters living look Lord manner means measure ment mind moral nature nerves never object observations occasion once opinion original particular passed perhaps persons political portion possession present principles produce question Raja readers reason received regard remain remarks respect seems seen society spirit supposed thing thought tion town truth various volume whole writer