The Edinburgh Review: Or Critical Journal, Volume 44 |
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Page 3
The story is thus deprived of the romantic character which cealment of Matthioli , to an anxiety on the part of Louis XIV . that such a breach of the law of nations as the imprisonment of a minister plenipotentiary ...
The story is thus deprived of the romantic character which cealment of Matthioli , to an anxiety on the part of Louis XIV . that such a breach of the law of nations as the imprisonment of a minister plenipotentiary ...
Page 9
... since it would be idle to expose the spuriousness of what no one appeared to think authentic . Dr Gauden , a divine of considerable talents , but of a tem- porizing and interested character , was , at the beginning of the Civil war ...
... since it would be idle to expose the spuriousness of what no one appeared to think authentic . Dr Gauden , a divine of considerable talents , but of a tem- porizing and interested character , was , at the beginning of the Civil war ...
Page 10
No such benefit could be hoped from the preferment of Gauden : and that his public character must have rendered him rather the object of disfavour than of patronage to the Court at this critical and jealous period , will be obvious to ...
No such benefit could be hoped from the preferment of Gauden : and that his public character must have rendered him rather the object of disfavour than of patronage to the Court at this critical and jealous period , will be obvious to ...
Page 12
Gauden appears soon after to have written to Sir E. Nicholas , Secretary of State , a letter of so peculiar a character as to be read by the King ; for an answer was sent to him by Nicholas , dated on the 19th January 1661 , in which ...
Gauden appears soon after to have written to Sir E. Nicholas , Secretary of State , a letter of so peculiar a character as to be read by the King ; for an answer was sent to him by Nicholas , dated on the 19th January 1661 , in which ...
Page 20
To suppose , with some late writers , that he and his brother looked with favour and pleasure on an at- tempt to weaken the general interest in the character of their father , merely because the Icon is friendly to the Church of England ...
To suppose , with some late writers , that he and his brother looked with favour and pleasure on an at- tempt to weaken the general interest in the character of their father , merely because the Icon is friendly to the Church of England ...
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Popular passages
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