The London Quarterly Review, Volumen16Theodore Foster, 1817 |
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Página 8
... kind , poultry and milk , abound in every village ; but the wretched Arab is compelled to live on a few lentils , and a small portion of bread and water , while he sees his fields plundered and his cattle driven away , to gratify the ...
... kind , poultry and milk , abound in every village ; but the wretched Arab is compelled to live on a few lentils , and a small portion of bread and water , while he sees his fields plundered and his cattle driven away , to gratify the ...
Página 11
... kind , was sufficient to 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 to his own ; such is , without doubt , the cause of ...
... kind , was sufficient to 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 to his own ; such is , without doubt , the cause of ...
Página 52
... kind or other throughout all classes of the community . It is no less obvious that this general necessity for exertion and activity is the condition most suitable to the develope- ment and improvement of the faculties of a being , in ...
... kind or other throughout all classes of the community . It is no less obvious that this general necessity for exertion and activity is the condition most suitable to the develope- ment and improvement of the faculties of a being , in ...
Página 53
... kind to have continued equal in their fortunes and conditions , the same equality would have extended to their minds . The consequence would have been a general inferiority of the rational faculties , The existence of high practical ...
... kind to have continued equal in their fortunes and conditions , the same equality would have extended to their minds . The consequence would have been a general inferiority of the rational faculties , The existence of high practical ...
Página 55
... kind under sufficient control , or to secure to the actual possessors the enjoyment of their property , but a tyranny sufficiently grinding either to repress the natural tendency to increase by generally pro- hibiting marriage among the ...
... kind under sufficient control , or to secure to the actual possessors the enjoyment of their property , but a tyranny sufficiently grinding either to repress the natural tendency to increase by generally pro- hibiting marriage among the ...
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ancient appears Arabs Bonaparte Brazil called camels Captain cause character Childe Harold circumstances civil coast Desert discovery effect England English established evil existence favour feelings feet France French Friendly Banks friends garden give hands heart honour hope Hudson Lowe Hudson's Bay Hudson's Bay Company human hundred interest island king Koster labour land latitude leagues Legh letter liberty Lord Byron Lord Selkirk Mamelukes mankind manner means ment mind Miss Plumptre Mogadore moral nation natives nature never North-west Company Nubia object observed opinion Parish party passage persons poem poet political poor possession present Prince Regent principle racter readers received Recife Riley river says seems ship Sidi Hamet society Spencean Philanthropists spirit Strait Sumner supposed Temple thing thought tion Tombuctoo travellers truth Upper Egypt vols voyage whole