The Quarterly Review, Volumen16John Murray, 1817 |
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... give , we ought to be proud of this national trait , peculi- arly characteristic , we believe , of British youth ; and so far from visiting their literary omissions with critical severity , we should consider their communications as ...
... give , we ought to be proud of this national trait , peculi- arly characteristic , we believe , of British youth ; and so far from visiting their literary omissions with critical severity , we should consider their communications as ...
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... give him time to remove his wife and his cow , and set off on full speed for that purpose and this poor man , we doubt not , was quite as well skilled as his neighbours in all the learning of the Egyptians . ' 6 The mud villages and the ...
... give him time to remove his wife and his cow , and set off on full speed for that purpose and this poor man , we doubt not , was quite as well skilled as his neighbours in all the learning of the Egyptians . ' 6 The mud villages and the ...
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... give rise to the first names ; and the very natural desire of associating himself to this species of renown , would induce every succeeding traveller to add his own ; such is , without doubt , the cause of those innumerable inscriptions ...
... give rise to the first names ; and the very natural desire of associating himself to this species of renown , would induce every succeeding traveller to add his own ; such is , without doubt , the cause of those innumerable inscriptions ...
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... give me a female slave to wait upon my wife . ' He afterwards made him a present of a Negro boy , and granted per- mission for them to proceed to Ibrîm , offering horses and dromeda- ries or any thing else that could be of service . The ...
... give me a female slave to wait upon my wife . ' He afterwards made him a present of a Negro boy , and granted per- mission for them to proceed to Ibrîm , offering horses and dromeda- ries or any thing else that could be of service . The ...
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... give some idea of the immensity of those wonderful pro- ductions of early art , he states that , having mounted upon the tip of the ear of a statue which was buried up to the shoulders in sand , he could just reach to the middle of its ...
... give some idea of the immensity of those wonderful pro- ductions of early art , he states that , having mounted upon the tip of the ear of a statue which was buried up to the shoulders in sand , he could just reach to the middle of its ...
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