The British Critic: A New Review, Volume 4F. and C. Rivington, 1815 - English literature |
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Page 14
... force by force on any particular particular occasion : Perhaps each man must judge for himself 14 Hey's Sermons on the Malevolent Sentiments .
... force by force on any particular particular occasion : Perhaps each man must judge for himself 14 Hey's Sermons on the Malevolent Sentiments .
Page 25
... force of his intellect , by the depth and range of his arguments , and by the compass of his gigantic faculties , he silenced by rudeness : and I have myself ( prodigious ! ) more than once stood in the predicament I here describe ...
... force of his intellect , by the depth and range of his arguments , and by the compass of his gigantic faculties , he silenced by rudeness : and I have myself ( prodigious ! ) more than once stood in the predicament I here describe ...
Page 26
... force and better effect than we are capable of doing . We will only remark , that over the death of the first Princess of Wirtemberg , & that 1 that deep and impenetrable veil described by Sir N. is 26 Wraxall's Historical Memoirs .
... force and better effect than we are capable of doing . We will only remark , that over the death of the first Princess of Wirtemberg , & that 1 that deep and impenetrable veil described by Sir N. is 26 Wraxall's Historical Memoirs .
Page 49
... forces of the Persian monarchy ; a part of history which , in our childhood , used to produce de- light and exultation , and the importance of which in the affairs of mankind we become more and more sensible of , as we re- flect upon ...
... forces of the Persian monarchy ; a part of history which , in our childhood , used to produce de- light and exultation , and the importance of which in the affairs of mankind we become more and more sensible of , as we re- flect upon ...
Page 50
... forces and the leaders who had accom- panied Xerxes in his ill - fated expedition , and express their un- easiness at not having heard any news of his success , and the dire forebodings of their minds . This is done in anapæsts , which ...
... forces and the leaders who had accom- panied Xerxes in his ill - fated expedition , and express their un- easiness at not having heard any news of his success , and the dire forebodings of their minds . This is done in anapæsts , which ...
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