The Monthly Epitome, Volume 3W. Clarke, 1800 - Great Britain |
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Page x
... Thoughts on , 74 Man , an Appeal to , 314 Man of Nature , by Miltenberg , 354 Management , a Comedy , 455 Manners , Illuftrations of ancient , 111 Manners's Review of Poetry , 193 Mantua , Plan of , 195 Margaritta , 73 Margate New Guide ...
... Thoughts on , 74 Man , an Appeal to , 314 Man of Nature , by Miltenberg , 354 Management , a Comedy , 455 Manners , Illuftrations of ancient , 111 Manners's Review of Poetry , 193 Mantua , Plan of , 195 Margaritta , 73 Margate New Guide ...
Page xiii
... Thoughts on the Con- Sermon , England's Caufes for Thankful- nefs , 115 dition of Women , 354 Robfon's Grammigraphia , 433 Rochefter , Bishop of , on Ifaiah , 235 -'s , ➖➖➖ , Speech , 272 Rodenhurft's Hawkftone , 71 ROCHEFOUCAULT's ...
... Thoughts on the Con- Sermon , England's Caufes for Thankful- nefs , 115 dition of Women , 354 Robfon's Grammigraphia , 433 Rochefter , Bishop of , on Ifaiah , 235 -'s , ➖➖➖ , Speech , 272 Rodenhurft's Hawkftone , 71 ROCHEFOUCAULT's ...
Page xiv
... Thoughts on Marriage , & c . 232 Tidd's Practical Forms , 433 Tocnaye's , La , Rambles through Ireland , 195 Tomlins's Index to King's Bench Reports , 191 Tone's Letter to an Officer , 113 TOOKE's View of the Ruffian Empire , 277 , 322 ...
... Thoughts on Marriage , & c . 232 Tidd's Practical Forms , 433 Tocnaye's , La , Rambles through Ireland , 195 Tomlins's Index to King's Bench Reports , 191 Tone's Letter to an Officer , 113 TOOKE's View of the Ruffian Empire , 277 , 322 ...
Page xv
... Thoughts on Government , 455 Wealth , Tefts of the National , 34 Weekly Review , 394 WELD's , James , Travels through North America , 3 , 315 Weld's , M. No Union , 114 Wells's Letters to her Pupils , 151 on the Happiness of Young ...
... Thoughts on Government , 455 Wealth , Tefts of the National , 34 Weekly Review , 394 WELD's , James , Travels through North America , 3 , 315 Weld's , M. No Union , 114 Wells's Letters to her Pupils , 151 on the Happiness of Young ...
Page 8
... thought , that every time they have beheld it each part has ap peared more wonderful and more fub- lime , and that it has only been at the time of their laft vifit that they have been able to difcover the grandeur of the cataract . " P ...
... thought , that every time they have beheld it each part has ap peared more wonderful and more fub- lime , and that it has only been at the time of their laft vifit that they have been able to difcover the grandeur of the cataract . " P ...
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Popular passages
Page 205 - The winds roared, and the rains fell. The poor white man, faint and weary, came and sat under our tree. He has no mother to bring him milk; no wife to grind his corn. Chorus. Let us pity the white man; no mother has he, &c.
Page 340 - I'll venture my life She has drunk of the Well of St. Keyne ." "I have left a good woman who never was here...
Page 340 - For from cock-crow he had been travelling, And there was not a cloud in the sky. He drank of the water so cool and clear, For thirsty and hot was he, And he sat down upon the bank Under the willow-tree.
Page 340 - If the husband of this gifted well Shall drink before his wife, A happy man thenceforth is he, ,For he shall be master for life.
Page 266 - Pizarro ; a tragedy, in five acts ; as performed at the Theatre Royal in Drury-Lane : taken from the German drama of Kotzebue ; and adapted to the English stage by Richard Brinsley Sheridan.
Page 202 - I found myself stretched upon the sand with the bridle still in my hand, and the sun just sinking behind the trees. I now summoned all my resolution, and determined to make another effort to prolong my existence. And as the evening was somewhat cool, I resolved to travel as far as my limbs would carry me, in hopes of reaching (my only resource) a wateringplace.
Page 295 - I would recommend the following plan: To have a ciftern for holding the milk a little broader than the cloth, to be covered with a...
Page 300 - ... coat, you find a worthlefs impure pearl. I tried feveral of them, taking one lamella off after another, and found clear and impure by turns ; and in an impure pearl I met with one of a clear water, though in the centre of all I found a foreign particle. The largeft and...
Page 205 - About sunset, however, as I was preparing to pass the night in this manner, and had turned my horse loose that he might graze at liberty, a woman, returning from the labours of the field, stopped to observe me, and perceiving that I was weary and dejected, inquired into my situation, which I briefly explained to her; whereupon, with looks of great compassion, she took up my saddle and bridle and told me to follow her. Having conducted me into her hut, she lighted...
Page 297 - Every one of the divers, and even the moft expert, entertain a great dread cf the (harks, and will not, on any account, defcend until the conjurer has performed his ceremonies. This prejudice is fo deeply rooted in their minds, that the government was obliged to keep two fuch conjurers always in their pay, to remove the fears of their divers.