The Quarterly Review, Volume 50William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, John Murray, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1834 - English literature |
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... Question . By C. Wetherell . 2. Extracts from the Information received by His Ma- jesty's Commissioners as to the Administration and Operation of the Poor - Laws . Published by Authority . 3. Reply of the Commissioners for Inquiring ...
... Question . By C. Wetherell . 2. Extracts from the Information received by His Ma- jesty's Commissioners as to the Administration and Operation of the Poor - Laws . Published by Authority . 3. Reply of the Commissioners for Inquiring ...
Page 2
... question we impute none but the most pure and the most honourable intentions ; but we certainly have no hesitation in saying , that they have essentially mistaken the purpose which Lord Bridgewater had in view , and that , if they have ...
... question we impute none but the most pure and the most honourable intentions ; but we certainly have no hesitation in saying , that they have essentially mistaken the purpose which Lord Bridgewater had in view , and that , if they have ...
Page 8
... stars of Cas- siopeia , and extended to something more than twice their distance from each other , will strike the double star in question , estimate 3 estimate the magnitude of even the least of the 8 Co The Bridgewater Treatises .
... stars of Cas- siopeia , and extended to something more than twice their distance from each other , will strike the double star in question , estimate 3 estimate the magnitude of even the least of the 8 Co The Bridgewater Treatises .
Page 10
... question whether such systems exist of their own innate vigour , or whether they have been created by a power extrinsic to themselves . If they are discovered to be self - existent , it follows that they must be imperishable . But if ...
... question whether such systems exist of their own innate vigour , or whether they have been created by a power extrinsic to themselves . If they are discovered to be self - existent , it follows that they must be imperishable . But if ...
Page 13
... question . If so , it was not improbable that other fragments of the same body were still in existence , and that the most likely place to detect them would be near the nodes of those already observed ; and to this profound reasoning we ...
... question . If so , it was not improbable that other fragments of the same body were still in existence , and that the most likely place to detect them would be near the nodes of those already observed ; and to this profound reasoning we ...
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