Monthly Review; Or New Literary JournalRalph Griffiths, George Edward Griffiths R. Griffiths., 1817 - Periodicals Editors: May 1749-Sept. 1803, Ralph Griffiths; Oct. 1803-Apr. 1825, G. E. Griffiths. |
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Results 1-5 of 98
Page 8
... principle so universally strong , that the natives of Lapland , a region which the greater portion of the inhabitants of the world would deem the most miserable of all inhabited countries , it is said , when removed from the place of ...
... principle so universally strong , that the natives of Lapland , a region which the greater portion of the inhabitants of the world would deem the most miserable of all inhabited countries , it is said , when removed from the place of ...
Page 45
... principles and doctrines of any par- ticular system or work - the dialectics or ethics of Aristotle for example there cannot be the smallest doubt that the English plan must again be pronounced superior ; because it is very clear that ...
... principles and doctrines of any par- ticular system or work - the dialectics or ethics of Aristotle for example there cannot be the smallest doubt that the English plan must again be pronounced superior ; because it is very clear that ...
Page 46
... principles of government , and all the other abstruse inquiries which , in Scotland , are classed under the head of moral science , the text - book and the tutor will be of comparatively little value .'- The English tutor exhibits a ...
... principles of government , and all the other abstruse inquiries which , in Scotland , are classed under the head of moral science , the text - book and the tutor will be of comparatively little value .'- The English tutor exhibits a ...
Page 49
... principles of the new . A lecture is pronounced upon a very difficult subject , in the hearing of a hundred and fifty or two hundred boys or very young men ; concerning which they are not once asked a question , not once called upon to ...
... principles of the new . A lecture is pronounced upon a very difficult subject , in the hearing of a hundred and fifty or two hundred boys or very young men ; concerning which they are not once asked a question , not once called upon to ...
Page 58
... principles and practices of friends , concerning which he had ob- tained information at some former period , and which he then endeavoured to explain to the Indians about him . Amongst other things he remarked , it was a self - evident ...
... principles and practices of friends , concerning which he had ob- tained information at some former period , and which he then endeavoured to explain to the Indians about him . Amongst other things he remarked , it was a self - evident ...
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