The Quarterly Review, Volume 19William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1819 - English literature |
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Page 3
... given to me At once I had ; For fault but small , or none at all . It came to pass thus beat I was ; See Udall , see , the mercy of thee To o me , poor lad ! No such inhumanity , we may be assured , would be perpetrated at Eton while ...
... given to me At once I had ; For fault but small , or none at all . It came to pass thus beat I was ; See Udall , see , the mercy of thee To o me , poor lad ! No such inhumanity , we may be assured , would be perpetrated at Eton while ...
Page 22
... given to plants such astonishing properties ; such fiery heat in some to warm and cherish , such coolness in others to temper and refresh , such pinguid juice in others to nourish and feed the body , such quick- ening acids to compel ...
... given to plants such astonishing properties ; such fiery heat in some to warm and cherish , such coolness in others to temper and refresh , such pinguid juice in others to nourish and feed the body , such quick- ening acids to compel ...
Page 30
... given you So many minute and particular accounts of it , by several expresses , when I then mentioned those things with the greatest joy , which now I write with as much sorrow and amasement . But so it is , that it has pleased God to ...
... given you So many minute and particular accounts of it , by several expresses , when I then mentioned those things with the greatest joy , which now I write with as much sorrow and amasement . But so it is , that it has pleased God to ...
Page 56
... given by a planter to his negroes , whom he had liberated ; their enclosures were but indifferently cultivated , and the negroes had a character for thieving - deservedly , I dare say , ' he subjoins , for slavery is a school of ...
... given by a planter to his negroes , whom he had liberated ; their enclosures were but indifferently cultivated , and the negroes had a character for thieving - deservedly , I dare say , ' he subjoins , for slavery is a school of ...
Page 57
... given indulgences and privileges unknown to the most favoured Valet of an English gentleman . This happened in consequence of some slight unintentional affront on the part of the in- dulgent master . It is stated as a melancholy fact ...
... given indulgences and privileges unknown to the most favoured Valet of an English gentleman . This happened in consequence of some slight unintentional affront on the part of the in- dulgent master . It is stated as a melancholy fact ...
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