The Edinburgh Review: Or Critical Journal, Volume 44 |
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Page 13
Cer- tainly this service is such , for the matter , manner , timing and effi- * Duppa . + It is not to be inferred from this and the like passages , that G. doubted the previous communication of Morley to Clarendon .
Cer- tainly this service is such , for the matter , manner , timing and effi- * Duppa . + It is not to be inferred from this and the like passages , that G. doubted the previous communication of Morley to Clarendon .
Page 17
letters ; making his admission at last in the hurried manner of an unwilling witness . The decisive words , however , were at length extorted from him , ' WHEN IT CEASES TO BE A SECRET , I KNOW NOBODY WILL BE GLAD OF IT , BUT MR MILTON ...
letters ; making his admission at last in the hurried manner of an unwilling witness . The decisive words , however , were at length extorted from him , ' WHEN IT CEASES TO BE A SECRET , I KNOW NOBODY WILL BE GLAD OF IT , BUT MR MILTON ...
Page 33
... Dr Wordsworth candidly abandons ) , or on the impure and os- tentatious character of his style , which have little weight unless we suppose him to have had no power of varying his manner when he speaks in the person of another man .
... Dr Wordsworth candidly abandons ) , or on the impure and os- tentatious character of his style , which have little weight unless we suppose him to have had no power of varying his manner when he speaks in the person of another man .
Page 48
In the same manner , the Amboyna tooth- powder must depend upon the Herald and the Morning Post . Unfortunately , the system of Mr Hamilton has been introduced to the world by the same means , and has exposed itself to those suspicions ...
In the same manner , the Amboyna tooth- powder must depend upon the Herald and the Morning Post . Unfortunately , the system of Mr Hamilton has been introduced to the world by the same means , and has exposed itself to those suspicions ...
Page 53
... than to turn something you do not understand into something you do understand , and as if that was not the best method which effected this object in the shortest and simplest manner . Hear upon this point the judicious Locke .
... than to turn something you do not understand into something you do understand , and as if that was not the best method which effected this object in the shortest and simplest manner . Hear upon this point the judicious Locke .
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Popular passages
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Page 68 - And though the Greek learning grew in credit amongst the Romans, towards the end of their commonwealth, yet it was the Roman tongue that was made the study of their youth: their own language they were to make use of, and therefore it was their own language they were instructed and exercised in.
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