The Edinburgh Review: Or Critical Journal, Volume 103A. Constable, 1856 |
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Page 204
... friends ' faces at reading it . ' 6 Could he wake from the dead and see his friends ' faces now , his characteristic smile of irony , rather than loud laughter , would be the form in which his feelings might be most appropriately ...
... friends ' faces at reading it . ' 6 Could he wake from the dead and see his friends ' faces now , his characteristic smile of irony , rather than loud laughter , would be the form in which his feelings might be most appropriately ...
Page 219
... friendship , we neither deserve nor acquire friends . What is worse , we forfeit our best source of consolation when we throw away hope ; and we canker happiness in the bud when we kill enthusiasm : ' Like following life in creatures we ...
... friendship , we neither deserve nor acquire friends . What is worse , we forfeit our best source of consolation when we throw away hope ; and we canker happiness in the bud when we kill enthusiasm : ' Like following life in creatures we ...
Page 563
... friends of liberty both here and abroad should have been staggered and alarmed at a suc- cession of blunders which apparently spoke so ill for the com- petence of the people and the wisdom of the institutions under which such failures ...
... friends of liberty both here and abroad should have been staggered and alarmed at a suc- cession of blunders which apparently spoke so ill for the com- petence of the people and the wisdom of the institutions under which such failures ...
Contents
1 Histoire de la République dAngleterre et de Crom | 1 |
Bengal the Sikkim and NepalHimalayas the Khasia | 55 |
lEcosse et de lIrlande Par Léonce de Lavergne | 82 |
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