The Quarterly Review, Volume 105William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1859 |
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Page 128
... give a steady encourage- ment to brigandage , the most vigorous administration of justice can only check it for a time , and we are not surprised to hear that up to the present time it continues to triumph in the Roman States . * Twice ...
... give a steady encourage- ment to brigandage , the most vigorous administration of justice can only check it for a time , and we are not surprised to hear that up to the present time it continues to triumph in the Roman States . * Twice ...
Page 268
... give and to give is soon to lose the power to refuse . There are evils which , if it were possible , it would be desirable to correct , but every one knows that reform with most persons means a further advance to democracy , which could ...
... give and to give is soon to lose the power to refuse . There are evils which , if it were possible , it would be desirable to correct , but every one knows that reform with most persons means a further advance to democracy , which could ...
Page 314
... give dignity in proportion to the height attained in them by the individual . It is something like being a ' laird ' in Scotland , there is but that one title for all owners of land below the nobility , and thus its distinction ...
... give dignity in proportion to the height attained in them by the individual . It is something like being a ' laird ' in Scotland , there is but that one title for all owners of land below the nobility , and thus its distinction ...
Contents
No 209 | 1 |
The Works of William Shakespeare The Text revised | 45 |
Report from the Select Committee on Consular Service | 74 |
Copyright | |
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