The Quarterly Review, Volumen16John Murray, 1817 |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 6-10 de 29
Página 82
... sufferings of others ; we find only masses of insulated beings , unconnected by any social tie , and actuated by motives purely selfish . The Chinese , who vaunt . themselves as the most wise and virtuous of mankind , and whose ...
... sufferings of others ; we find only masses of insulated beings , unconnected by any social tie , and actuated by motives purely selfish . The Chinese , who vaunt . themselves as the most wise and virtuous of mankind , and whose ...
Página 141
... sufferings from cold and hunger , endured by one set of people , and the torpid state of existence which the others drag on ,, not very unlike that of the cold - blooded animals by whom they are sur- rounded . Shut up in summer and ...
... sufferings from cold and hunger , endured by one set of people , and the torpid state of existence which the others drag on ,, not very unlike that of the cold - blooded animals by whom they are sur- rounded . Shut up in summer and ...
Página 160
... sufferings from cold , hunger , disease , & c . though the latitude in which he passed the winter was only 52 ° 3. Without adding the slightest information to the geo- graphy of Hudson's Sea , he decides boldly that there is no such ...
... sufferings from cold , hunger , disease , & c . though the latitude in which he passed the winter was only 52 ° 3. Without adding the slightest information to the geo- graphy of Hudson's Sea , he decides boldly that there is no such ...
Página 203
... sufferings . Yet as a picture , however gloomy the colouring , it may rival any which Lord Byron has drawn , nor is it possible to read it without a sinking of the heart , corresponding with that which he describes the victim to have ...
... sufferings . Yet as a picture , however gloomy the colouring , it may rival any which Lord Byron has drawn , nor is it possible to read it without a sinking of the heart , corresponding with that which he describes the victim to have ...
Página 206
... sufferings of the noble poet . But to uncover a wound is to demand a surgeon's hand to tent it . With kinder feelings to Lord Byron in person and repu tation no one could approach him than ourselves : we owe it to the pleasure which he ...
... sufferings of the noble poet . But to uncover a wound is to demand a surgeon's hand to tent it . With kinder feelings to Lord Byron in person and repu tation no one could approach him than ourselves : we owe it to the pleasure which he ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
ancient Anne Plumptre appears Arabs Brazil Buonaparte Buonaparte's called camels Captain cause character Childe Harold circumstances civil coast Desert discovery effect Emperor England English existence favour feeling feet France French Friendly Banks Fur Trade garden give hands honour Hudson Lowe Hudson's Bay Hudson's Bay Company human hundred Indians inhabitants interest island king Koster labour land latitude leagues Legh letter Lord Byron Lord Selkirk Mamelukes mankind manner means ment mind Miss Plumptre Mogadore moral natives nature never North-west Company Nubia object observed opinion Parish passage Pernambuco persons poem poet political poor possession present principle racter readers received Recife remarkable Riley river savage saved says seems shew ship Sidi Hamet society Spencean Philanthropists spirit Strait Sumner supposed surprize Temple thing thought tion Tombuctoo travellers truth voyage whole