The Retrospective Review.., Volume 7 |
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Page 49
... The Diary of his own Life , faithfully and entirely published from the original
copy . London , 1695 . The auto - biography of Archbishop Laud is calculated ,
we think , to account satisfactorily both for the affectionate reverence entertained
for ...
... The Diary of his own Life , faithfully and entirely published from the original
copy . London , 1695 . The auto - biography of Archbishop Laud is calculated ,
we think , to account satisfactorily both for the affectionate reverence entertained
for ...
Page 133
Into those of her characters in particular , who engage our best affections , and
with whom we sympathise most deeply , she seems to have transfused the very
essence of life . These are , doubtless , the finest of her compositions , and with ...
Into those of her characters in particular , who engage our best affections , and
with whom we sympathise most deeply , she seems to have transfused the very
essence of life . These are , doubtless , the finest of her compositions , and with ...
Page 179
For his sake , content to leave father and mother , friends and countrymen , house
and home ; and gifted with a power almost equal to ubiquity , yet bound by the
golden tie of conjugal affection to one solitary spot of earth ; she is the very ...
For his sake , content to leave father and mother , friends and countrymen , house
and home ; and gifted with a power almost equal to ubiquity , yet bound by the
golden tie of conjugal affection to one solitary spot of earth ; she is the very ...
Page 180
... and countrymen of Youwarkee , to whom we are successively introduced , any
very large portion of that affection , which every reader , unless differently
constituted from the rest of mankind , will be disposed to entertain towards her .
... and countrymen of Youwarkee , to whom we are successively introduced , any
very large portion of that affection , which every reader , unless differently
constituted from the rest of mankind , will be disposed to entertain towards her .
Page 197
He probably despised his brother ' s taste and understanding too much : his own
vacillating temper was too much awed by the other ' s stubborn resolution , to feel
any thing like affection for him ; but this does not prove that Charles was ...
He probably despised his brother ' s taste and understanding too much : his own
vacillating temper was too much awed by the other ' s stubborn resolution , to feel
any thing like affection for him ; but this does not prove that Charles was ...
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