The Scots Magazine, Band 24Sands, Brymer, Murray and Cochran, 1762 |
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Seite 10
... preserve his communication with the other places where he had magazines. Pr. Ferdinand, having thus gained so much time, which then was his principal aim, suddenly repassed to the left of the Dymel, caused a part of his army to extend ...
... preserve his communication with the other places where he had magazines. Pr. Ferdinand, having thus gained so much time, which then was his principal aim, suddenly repassed to the left of the Dymel, caused a part of his army to extend ...
Seite 10
... preserve his communication with Breslao and draw subsistence from the adjacen country, by the navigation of the Oder. The only blow he received in that duchy during the campaign, but that indeeds severe one, was struck early in the ...
... preserve his communication with Breslao and draw subsistence from the adjacen country, by the navigation of the Oder. The only blow he received in that duchy during the campaign, but that indeeds severe one, was struck early in the ...
Seite 15
... preserve that constiotion. show us the foundation on which * tas erected his throne; and, could any opez rance of danger approach his person, Irope. that he would find a multitude, in every part of his dominions, ready to Peristi for ...
... preserve that constiotion. show us the foundation on which * tas erected his throne; and, could any opez rance of danger approach his person, Irope. that he would find a multitude, in every part of his dominions, ready to Peristi for ...
Seite 16
... preserve, no national charaćter to maintain. But in the members of a free state, it bodes nothing but impending corruption, a mercenary spirit, and proneness to slavery, a disposition ready to barter or subunit whenever a purchaser ...
... preserve, no national charaćter to maintain. But in the members of a free state, it bodes nothing but impending corruption, a mercenary spirit, and proneness to slavery, a disposition ready to barter or subunit whenever a purchaser ...
Seite 23
... Preserve them pure and untainted. Neither of them are arbitrary or local. They are rooted in human nature, and are governed by principles common to all men. The principles of morality belong not to the present undertaking. But as to the ...
... Preserve them pure and untainted. Neither of them are arbitrary or local. They are rooted in human nature, and are governed by principles common to all men. The principles of morality belong not to the present undertaking. But as to the ...
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