The London Quarterly Review, Volumen16Theodore Foster, 1817 |
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Página 10
... reader must sit down contented with the single description of the first traveller , however inaccurate . 6 Pococke bears testimony to the correctness of Diodorus , in his description of Thebes and the stupendous temples of Karnac and ...
... reader must sit down contented with the single description of the first traveller , however inaccurate . 6 Pococke bears testimony to the correctness of Diodorus , in his description of Thebes and the stupendous temples of Karnac and ...
Página 28
... readers must be aware , that we are generally inclined ( though we do not shrink from giving our own honest opinion ) to permit authors to speak for themselves ; and to quote from their own works such passages as may appear to us to ...
... readers must be aware , that we are generally inclined ( though we do not shrink from giving our own honest opinion ) to permit authors to speak for themselves ; and to quote from their own works such passages as may appear to us to ...
Página 29
... readers . We shall conclude our poetical extracts with the de- scription of a traitor , which will remind our readers of some of the most splendid passages of Lord Nugent's Portugal . the traitor's impious soul Blasphemes at grace and ...
... readers . We shall conclude our poetical extracts with the de- scription of a traitor , which will remind our readers of some of the most splendid passages of Lord Nugent's Portugal . the traitor's impious soul Blasphemes at grace and ...
Página 31
... readers will , by this time , think that we have fully justified our opinion of the style of this Dublin Demosthenes . But we have something more than mere errors of style to object to Mr. Phillips ; we shall say little of the want of ...
... readers will , by this time , think that we have fully justified our opinion of the style of this Dublin Demosthenes . But we have something more than mere errors of style to object to Mr. Phillips ; we shall say little of the want of ...
Página 33
... readers have seen , a poem called the Emerald sle . It was dedicated , by permission , to His Royal Highness the Prince Regent , Ireland's Hope and England's Ornament . ' The poem did not belie the promise of the dedication ; it is a ...
... readers have seen , a poem called the Emerald sle . It was dedicated , by permission , to His Royal Highness the Prince Regent , Ireland's Hope and England's Ornament . ' The poem did not belie the promise of the dedication ; it is a ...
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