The Scots Magazine, Band 51Sands, Brymer, Murray and Cochran, 1789 |
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Seite 4
... refpect to pay the fame attention to their own young as to the young cuckoo , until the 13th , when the neft was unfortunately plundered . The fmallness of the cuckoo's egg in proportion to the fize of the bird is a circumflance that ...
... refpect to pay the fame attention to their own young as to the young cuckoo , until the 13th , when the neft was unfortunately plundered . The fmallness of the cuckoo's egg in proportion to the fize of the bird is a circumflance that ...
Seite 13
... refpect to his parliament . He next ad- verted to the period of the Revolution , little of which , he said , was applicable to the prefent moment ; he discrimina- ted between the applicable and inappli cable parts , and thewed that the ...
... refpect to his parliament . He next ad- verted to the period of the Revolution , little of which , he said , was applicable to the prefent moment ; he discrimina- ted between the applicable and inappli cable parts , and thewed that the ...
Seite 15
... refpect he held for his father , as to diffolve immediately his parliament ; no perfon , he was confident , would argue fuch a thing as more than barely poffible , much less as probable . He conceived the motive of the Rt Hon ...
... refpect he held for his father , as to diffolve immediately his parliament ; no perfon , he was confident , would argue fuch a thing as more than barely poffible , much less as probable . He conceived the motive of the Rt Hon ...
Seite 25
... refpect , at all different from that of an individual , or of a number of individuals , and that though debts may ruin the latter , they will not hurt the former . The only difference is , that a ftate cannot be compelled to pay its ...
... refpect , at all different from that of an individual , or of a number of individuals , and that though debts may ruin the latter , they will not hurt the former . The only difference is , that a ftate cannot be compelled to pay its ...
Seite 33
... refpect to the Son . To give the unknown writer his due , we really think that on a fubject not in itself very favourable to the poet , perhaps few of the prefent rhyming race " would have fucceeded bet- ter . M. 66 The froft , a little ...
... refpect to the Son . To give the unknown writer his due , we really think that on a fubject not in itself very favourable to the poet , perhaps few of the prefent rhyming race " would have fucceeded bet- ter . M. 66 The froft , a little ...
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Beliebte Passagen
Seite 26 - Italian republics seem to have begun it. Genoa and Venice, the only two remaining which can pretend to an independent existence, have both been enfeebled by it. Spain seems to have learned the practice from the Italian republics, and (its taxes being probably less judicious than theirs) it has, in proportion to its natural strength, been still more enfeebled.
Seite 373 - I believe that no act in itself unjust, immoral, or wicked, can ever be justified or excused by or under pretence or colour, that it was done either for the good of the church, or in obedience to any ecclesiastical power whatsoever.
Seite 68 - Each year is marked by the repetition of earthquakes, of such duration that Constantinople has been shaken above forty days; of such extent, that the shock has been communicated to the whole surface of the globe, or at least of the Roman empire.
Seite 88 - Faculty, among whom surgery may be supposed, at that time, to have been at a very low ebb. He tapped the wife of a Dutch merchant who had the dropsy, but the operation having been too long deferred, the poor woman...
Seite 26 - France, notwithstanding all its natural resources, languishes under an oppressive load of the same kind. The republic of the United Provinces is as much enfeebled by its debts as either Genoa or Venice. Is it likely that in Great Britain alone a practice, which has brought either weakness or desolation into every other country, should prove altogether innocent?
Seite 7 - ... for their own young ones, after a certain period; nor would there be room for the whole to inhabit the nest.
Seite 407 - It is ordered and adjudged by the lords spiritual and temporal in parliament assembled, that the said petition and appeal be, and is hereby, dismissed this House ; and that the said interlocutor therein complained of be, and the same is hereby, affirmed.
Seite 184 - Turk the other day lying on cushions, striking slowly an iron which he was shaping into a horse-shoe, his pipe in his mouth all the time — nay, among the higher order of Turks, there is an invention which...
Seite 254 - Lennox said, he could not possibly fire again at the Duke, as his Royal Highness did not mean to fire at him. On this, both parties left the ground. The seconds think it proper to add, that both parties behaved with the most perfect coolness and intrepidity.
Seite 373 - ... and we do solemnly declare, that neither the Pope, either with or without a general council, nor any prelate, nor any priest, nor any assembly of prelates or priests, nor any ecclesiastical power whatever, can absolve the subjects of this realm, or any of them, from their allegiance to his Majesty King GEORGE THE THIRD, who is, by authority of parliament, the lawful king...