The Edinburgh Review: Or Critical Journal, Volume 44 |
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Page 1
Our interest in the history of past times is of the same nature with our sentiments on the matters that daily occur around us . The breathless anxiety with which the ob- scure and conflicting evidence on a trial at law is watched by the ...
Our interest in the history of past times is of the same nature with our sentiments on the matters that daily occur around us . The breathless anxiety with which the ob- scure and conflicting evidence on a trial at law is watched by the ...
Page 6
... by measures of so public and decisive a nature as to cut off all retreat . It may be observed also , that Junius , who is unfriendly to Lord Chatham in the beginning , loads that nobleman with panegyric after he was recon- ciled to ...
... by measures of so public and decisive a nature as to cut off all retreat . It may be observed also , that Junius , who is unfriendly to Lord Chatham in the beginning , loads that nobleman with panegyric after he was recon- ciled to ...
Page 12
On the 21st January , the importunate prelate again addressed to Clarendon a letter , ex- plicitly stating the nature of his services , probably rendered necessary in his opinion by the continued silence of Clarendon , ( who it should ...
On the 21st January , the importunate prelate again addressed to Clarendon a letter , ex- plicitly stating the nature of his services , probably rendered necessary in his opinion by the continued silence of Clarendon , ( who it should ...
Page 17
... ( 17th January 1662 ) , and in a memorial to the King , without a date , but written on the same occasion . The two letters allude to the particulars of former communications . The memorial , as the nature of such a paper ...
... ( 17th January 1662 ) , and in a memorial to the King , without a date , but written on the same occasion . The two letters allude to the particulars of former communications . The memorial , as the nature of such a paper ...
Page 21
But it was a fact of a very touch- ing and interesting nature , on which his genius would have expatiated with affectionate delight . No later historian of the Royal party has failed to dwell on it . How should he then whom it must have ...
But it was a fact of a very touch- ing and interesting nature , on which his genius would have expatiated with affectionate delight . No later historian of the Royal party has failed to dwell on it . How should he then whom it must have ...
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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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