Museum of Foreign Literature and Science, Volumen4Robert Walsh, Eliakim Littell, John Jay Smith E. Littell, 1824 |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 34
Página 80
... learned assailants of popery , -it naturally happened that many unlearned readers of these pro- testant polemics caught at a phrase which was so much bandied between the two parties : the spirit of the context sufficiently ex- plained ...
... learned assailants of popery , -it naturally happened that many unlearned readers of these pro- testant polemics caught at a phrase which was so much bandied between the two parties : the spirit of the context sufficiently ex- plained ...
Página 208
... learned judge , a gentleman , and impartial ; but being of Welsh extraction , was apt to warm , and , when much offended , often showed his heats in a rubor of his countenance , set off by his grey hairs , but appeared in no other ...
... learned judge , a gentleman , and impartial ; but being of Welsh extraction , was apt to warm , and , when much offended , often showed his heats in a rubor of his countenance , set off by his grey hairs , but appeared in no other ...
Página 284
... learned to dance ; " and in others to reject art and authority altogether . It is clear , however , from the general tenor and bearing of his arguments , that his object is not only to show the necessity , or rather the ad- vantage of ...
... learned to dance ; " and in others to reject art and authority altogether . It is clear , however , from the general tenor and bearing of his arguments , that his object is not only to show the necessity , or rather the ad- vantage of ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Museum of Foreign Literature and Science, Volumen5 Robert Walsh,Eliakim Littell,John Jay Smith Vista completa - 1824 |
Museum of Foreign Literature and Science, Volumen14 Robert Walsh,Eliakim Littell,John Jay Smith Vista completa - 1829 |
Museum of Foreign Literature and Science, Volumen1 Robert Walsh,Eliakim Littell,John Jay Smith Vista completa - 1822 |
Términos y frases comunes
admiration amusement Anastasius appear Arbuthnot beautiful BLACKWOOD'S MAGAZINE called cause character Covenanters Dean Swift death delight doubt effect England English eyes favour fear feeling France French George Cruikshank give grass Hajji hand head heard heart honour hope hour humour Ignatius interest king labour lady letter literary LITERARY GAZETTE live London look Lord Lord Byron manner MARTIN ARCHER SHEE matter means Memoirs ment mind Montaigne morning nature Navarre neral never night novel Nur Jehan object observed occasion perhaps person poet political present principles racter readers remarkable scarcely scene Scotland seemed Sobrarbe society soon soul speak spirit style talents taste thee thing thou thought tion took truth volume Whigs whole William Cobbett word write young