The British Magazine, Or, Monthly Repository for Gentlemen & LadiesJames Rivington & James Fletcher ... & H. Payne |
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Seite 14
... hand . Then as to the practical part , if poffible , you must cajole the people to fwallow your politics , as you used to do the mcb to fwallow your faufages : you have a rare talent for this ; a falfe tongue , and a wicked cunning ...
... hand . Then as to the practical part , if poffible , you must cajole the people to fwallow your politics , as you used to do the mcb to fwallow your faufages : you have a rare talent for this ; a falfe tongue , and a wicked cunning ...
Seite 40
... hand . Addrefs to the Princefs Dowager . Madam , T HE Lord Mayor , Aldermen , and common council affem- bled , beg leave to congratulate your Royal Highnefs on the marriage of your eldest daughter , her Royal Highnefs the Princefs ...
... hand . Addrefs to the Princefs Dowager . Madam , T HE Lord Mayor , Aldermen , and common council affem- bled , beg leave to congratulate your Royal Highnefs on the marriage of your eldest daughter , her Royal Highnefs the Princefs ...
Seite 57
... hand , and by his attitude feem- ed just going to plunge it in her heart ; he immediately attacked the villain with fo much resolution , that he betook himself to flight , and shewed by his precipitate retreat from danger , that his ...
... hand , and by his attitude feem- ed just going to plunge it in her heart ; he immediately attacked the villain with fo much resolution , that he betook himself to flight , and shewed by his precipitate retreat from danger , that his ...
Seite 67
... hand , the duke never forgave the affiftance which Henry had given to those who would have difpoffeff- ed him of his dominions . In pur- fuance , therefore , of his old scheme , the king united himself with Geof frey Martel ; and having ...
... hand , the duke never forgave the affiftance which Henry had given to those who would have difpoffeff- ed him of his dominions . In pur- fuance , therefore , of his old scheme , the king united himself with Geof frey Martel ; and having ...
Seite 72
... hand , when you mix a little of liberty with monar- chy , the yoke becomes always the more grievous and intolerable . I fhall endeavour to explain myself . In a government , fuch as that of France , which is entirely abfolute , and ...
... hand , when you mix a little of liberty with monar- chy , the yoke becomes always the more grievous and intolerable . I fhall endeavour to explain myself . In a government , fuch as that of France , which is entirely abfolute , and ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
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Beliebte Passagen
Seite 270 - But what of that, his friends may say, He had those honours in his day. True to his profit and his pride, He made them weep before he dy'd.
Seite 136 - ... elevated above the common rank of mankind. It is faid of him, that there never was a fcholar more humble, a wit more devout, or a man more amiable in fociety.
Seite 336 - While we see multitudes passing before us, of whom perhaps not one appears to deserve our notice or excite our sympathy, we should remember, that we likewise are lost in the same throng, that the eye which happens to glance upon us is turned in a moment on him that follows us, and that the utmost which we can reasonably hope or fear, is to fill a vacant hour with prattle and be forgotten.
Seite 13 - I have been bullied by an usurper ; I have been neglected by a court ; but I will not be dictated to by a subject : your man shan't stand. " ANNE Dorset, Pembroke and Montgomery.
Seite 151 - Honours that he could any where enjoy under any other Establishment. You see, Sir, the Doctrines that are lately come into the World, and how far the Phrase has obtained of calling your Royal Father God's Vicegerent, which ill Men have turned both to the Dishonour of God, and the Impeachment of his Majesty's Goodness.
Seite 559 - Boyse, reduced to the last extremity of human wretchedness, had not a shirt, a coat, or any kind of apparel, to put on ; the sheets in which he lay were carried to the pawn-broker's, and he was obliged to be confined to his bed with no other covering than a blanket. He had little...
Seite 144 - Gules, on a bend between six cross crosslets fitchy, argent, an escutcheon or, charged with a demi-lion rampant pierced through the mouth with an arrow, within a double tressure, flory...
Seite 74 - Nothing is so effectual to this purpose as the liberty of the press, by which all the learning, wit, and genius of the nation, may be employed on the side of freedom ; and every one be animated to its defence.
Seite 152 - ... from slavery; from a condition as much below that of brutes, as to act without reason is less miserable than to act against it. Preserve to your future subjects the divine right of being free agents, and to your own royal house the divine right of being their benefactors. Believe me, my Prince, there is no other right can flow from God.
Seite 537 - In the month of May it buries itself in the earth and begins to vegetate. By the latter end of July, the tree is arrived at its full growth, and resembles a coral branch, and is about three inches high, and bears several little pods, which, dropping off, become worms, and from thence flies, like the English caterpillar.