The Scots Magazine, Band 4Sands, Brymer, Murray and Cochran, 1742 |
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Seite 19
... crime . This was the privilege which every Englishman an- ciently enjoyed ; but taxes and ftanding armies have now deprived most of the fub- jects of England of this valuable privilege ; and , in all the laws that have been made for ...
... crime . This was the privilege which every Englishman an- ciently enjoyed ; but taxes and ftanding armies have now deprived most of the fub- jects of England of this valuable privilege ; and , in all the laws that have been made for ...
Seite 26
... crime will , in ftrict law , be the fame ; they will break open doors to come at it , or to fearch for it : and if fuch a body of men fhould once begin to think themselves criminal in the eye of the law , they will naturally and of ...
... crime will , in ftrict law , be the fame ; they will break open doors to come at it , or to fearch for it : and if fuch a body of men fhould once begin to think themselves criminal in the eye of the law , they will naturally and of ...
Seite 45
... crime , but to raise in your hearts that fenfe of gratitude you owe to the house , for the gentle treatment you have met with on this occafion . In expectation of which you are discharged , paying your fees . On the 19th of Jan. the ...
... crime , but to raise in your hearts that fenfe of gratitude you owe to the house , for the gentle treatment you have met with on this occafion . In expectation of which you are discharged , paying your fees . On the 19th of Jan. the ...
Seite 101
... crime : the people's being ge- nerally diffatisfied with him , and fufpici- ous of his conduct , is a fufficient foundati- on for fuch an addrefs , and a fufficient caufe for his Majefty's removing him from his councils ; because no ...
... crime : the people's being ge- nerally diffatisfied with him , and fufpici- ous of his conduct , is a fufficient foundati- on for fuch an addrefs , and a fufficient caufe for his Majefty's removing him from his councils ; because no ...
Seite 102
... crime ; for having thus monopolized all the favours of the crown , he has made a blind fubmiffion to his direction at ele- Etions and in parliament , the only ground to hope for any honours or preferments , and the only tenure by which ...
... crime ; for having thus monopolized all the favours of the crown , he has made a blind fubmiffion to his direction at ele- Etions and in parliament , the only ground to hope for any honours or preferments , and the only tenure by which ...
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Beliebte Passagen
Seite 366 - Tea, happen'd to have Charms sufficient to tempt the little-tiny Manhood of Mr. Pope into the next Room with her: at which you may imagine, his Lordship was in as much Joy, at what might happen within, as our small Friend could probably be in Possession of it: But I (forgive me all ye mortified Mortals whom his fell...
Seite 514 - That you, and each of you, be taken to the place from whence you came, and that you be drawn on a hurdle to the place of execution...
Seite 366 - Prick'd to it by foolish Honesty and Love, As Shakespear says, without Ceremony, threw open the Door upon him, where I found this little hasty Hero, like a terrible Tom Tit, pertly perching upon the Mount of Love ! But such was my Surprize that I fairly laid hold of his Heels, and actually drew him down safe and sound from his Danger.
Seite 363 - Bays might think proper to take. Much about this time, then, the Three Hours after Marriage had been acted without success, when Mr.
Seite 160 - ... the crowns of France and Spain, with the Imperial dignity, and the Austrian dominions. It was therefore highly reasonable, both in France and us, to take the alarm at such designs, and to think betimes of preventing their being carried into execution. But with regard to us, it was more particularly our business to take the alarm, because we were to have been immediately attacked. I shall grant, Sir, it would have been very difficult, if not impossible, for Spain and the...
Seite 36 - As I am a man, I love him ; as I am a scholar, I hate him ; as I am a Briton, I calmly wish his fall.
Seite 363 - Mr Pope, you are so particular a man, that I must be ashamed to return your language as I ought to do ; but since you have attacked me in so monstrous a manner, this you may depend upon, that as long as the play continues to be acted, I will never fail to repeat the same words over and over again...
Seite 161 - Spain, where we have always had a very beneficial commerce. These hopes, it is true, sir, at last proved abortive; but I never heard it was a crime to hope for the best. This sort of hope was the cause of the late convention. If Spain had performed her part of that preliminary treaty, I am sure...
Seite 41 - The Lord Mayor, Aldermen, and Common Council, Of the City of London...
Seite 363 - Pope, that, in the swelling of his Heart, after the Play was over, he came behind the Scenes, with his Lips pale and his Voice trembling, to call me to account for the Insult...