The Quarterly Review, Volume 72J. Murray, 1843 |
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Page 110
... political views coincided with his own . Nor was he sum- moned , as it were , into political being by any of those fortunate exigencies which suddenly strike the slumbering fire out of some powerful intellect , unconscious perhaps of ...
... political views coincided with his own . Nor was he sum- moned , as it were , into political being by any of those fortunate exigencies which suddenly strike the slumbering fire out of some powerful intellect , unconscious perhaps of ...
Page 323
... political events destroyed his tranquillity of mind . That his anxieties for the welfare of his distracted country actually caused his death , may be perhaps doubtful ; yet those who loved him best , and are best acquainted with him ...
... political events destroyed his tranquillity of mind . That his anxieties for the welfare of his distracted country actually caused his death , may be perhaps doubtful ; yet those who loved him best , and are best acquainted with him ...
Page 336
never belonged to any political party , in the strict sense of the term . ' I do not subscribe , ' said he , to any confession of faith in politics or in political economy . I do not know any principles in either science which appear to ...
never belonged to any political party , in the strict sense of the term . ' I do not subscribe , ' said he , to any confession of faith in politics or in political economy . I do not know any principles in either science which appear to ...
Contents
The Lady of the Manor Being a Series of Conversations | 25 |
Peregrine Bunce By the Author of Sayings | 53 |
25 | 72 |
Copyright | |
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