The Edinburgh Review: Or Critical Journal, Tom 126A. Constable, 1867 |
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Strona 11
... seems so absurd as to institute any comparison be- tween their characters in this sense . When the Duke was gone , Bute became in name , as he had been for some time in reality , the head of the Administration . He was gazetted First ...
... seems so absurd as to institute any comparison be- tween their characters in this sense . When the Duke was gone , Bute became in name , as he had been for some time in reality , the head of the Administration . He was gazetted First ...
Strona 13
... seems to us that the popular ignorance of that time must have prevented the due appreciation of the successes achieved by English arms during the war . It is one of the highest tributes to the genius of Pitt that the influence of his ...
... seems to us that the popular ignorance of that time must have prevented the due appreciation of the successes achieved by English arms during the war . It is one of the highest tributes to the genius of Pitt that the influence of his ...
Strona 15
... seems to have been as open as it could be . Pitt received an open and unsealed note from the King requesting his attendance at the Queen's Palace on a certain day , and thither Pitt accordingly went in his gouty sedan , the appearance ...
... seems to have been as open as it could be . Pitt received an open and unsealed note from the King requesting his attendance at the Queen's Palace on a certain day , and thither Pitt accordingly went in his gouty sedan , the appearance ...
Strona 17
... seems probable from the nature of things that Bute's long relations with the Court did give him access to the King after he had quitted office , but that as the scandal of Bute's connexion with the Princess Dowager became more general ...
... seems probable from the nature of things that Bute's long relations with the Court did give him access to the King after he had quitted office , but that as the scandal of Bute's connexion with the Princess Dowager became more general ...
Strona 24
... seems impossible to believe that the time should ever come when the King and his Minister would be no longer friends . Yet that time did come , and came much sooner than either of the correspondents dreamed of . The Minister who had ...
... seems impossible to believe that the time should ever come when the King and his Minister would be no longer friends . Yet that time did come , and came much sooner than either of the correspondents dreamed of . The Minister who had ...
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appears army authority Bill Bishop Bute Catholic cause century character Christian Church classes colour Commissioners Constitution Council CXXVI doubt Drummond duty Emperor England English existence fact favour feeling force France French friends give Government Gregory hand honour House of Commons India interest Ireland Irish justice King labour Lady land less letters Liberal Lord Lord Bute Lord Derby Lord North Lord Plunket Madagascar Madame de Staël Malagasy manufacture matter means ment Meteyard military mind Minister Miss Edgeworth Napoleon nation native natural never Nicene Creed nobles object opinion Parliament party period persons Plunket political port port wine possession present principles Queen's House question Radama Reform regard reign remarkable respect Roman rubric rule Scotland Scottish sherry Society spirit statutes success tion trade Trochu Union ware Wedgwood whole wine
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Strona 233 - Beautiful forms and compositions are not made by chance, nor can they ever, in any material, be made at small expense. A composition for cheapness, and not for excellence of workmanship, is the most frequent and certain cause of the rapid decay and entire destruction of arts and manufactures.
Strona 119 - GENERAL Councils may not be gathered together without the commandment and will of Princes. And when they be gathered together, (forasmuch as they be an assembly of men, whereof all be not governed with the Spirit and Word of God,) they may err, and sometimes have erred, even in things pertaining unto God. Wherefore things ordained by them as necessary to salvation have neither strength nor authority, unless it may be declared that they be taken out of holy Scripture.
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Strona 33 - He says they will be lions while we are lambs ; but if we take the resolute part, they will undoubtedly prove very meek.
Strona 6 - Whenever he is displeased, his anger does not break out with heat and violence ; but he becomes sullen and silent, and retires to his closet ; not to compose his mind by study or contemplation, but merely to indulge the melancholy enjoyment of his own ill-humour. .Even when the fit is ended, unfavourable symptoms very frequently return, which indicate that on certain occasions his Royal Highness has too correct a memory.
Strona 366 - I will venture to affirm, that what is commonly called the technical part of legislation, is incomparably more difficult than what may be styled the ethical. In other words, it is far easier to conceive justly what would be useful law, than so to construct that same law that it may accomplish the design of the lawgiver.
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