The Quarterly Review, Volumes 98-99John Murray, 1856 |
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Page 26
... true wel- fare of the children , will witness with pain the tendency to buoy them up during their residence in the school with supports which do not strengthen them , and which they will find altogether withdrawn as soon as they go out ...
... true wel- fare of the children , will witness with pain the tendency to buoy them up during their residence in the school with supports which do not strengthen them , and which they will find altogether withdrawn as soon as they go out ...
Page 42
... true to life , they were true l'entour de sa personne . ' The occasion of this to the mind and kindled imagination of the edict was a farce in which the amour of the king with the wife of a well - known M. le Coq was re- presented in ...
... true to life , they were true l'entour de sa personne . ' The occasion of this to the mind and kindled imagination of the edict was a farce in which the amour of the king with the wife of a well - known M. le Coq was re- presented in ...
Page 45
... true of Falstaff is true of all his crew , of Nym , Bardolph , Pistol ; it is true of all the strongly - marked comic characters of Shak - pilloried and pelted . Provided the missiles speare . each of which is , as it were , a paragraph ...
... true of Falstaff is true of all his crew , of Nym , Bardolph , Pistol ; it is true of all the strongly - marked comic characters of Shak - pilloried and pelted . Provided the missiles speare . each of which is , as it were , a paragraph ...
Page 47
... true to its own sionate with the ridiculous . We may indeed times , in a certain degree limited , temporary , say that satire is the most melancholy of all transitory ; as a comedy of character , wide , writings ; and Menander's comedy ...
... true to its own sionate with the ridiculous . We may indeed times , in a certain degree limited , temporary , say that satire is the most melancholy of all transitory ; as a comedy of character , wide , writings ; and Menander's comedy ...
Page 67
... Newgate , in which Roger Johnson , who levies taxes on the prisoners under the plea of assisting them in their defence , and who wears a silk nightgown , an em- • 6 them . ' What Murphy has republished of the True 1856 . 67 Henry Fielding .
... Newgate , in which Roger Johnson , who levies taxes on the prisoners under the plea of assisting them in their defence , and who wears a silk nightgown , an em- • 6 them . ' What Murphy has republished of the True 1856 . 67 Henry Fielding .
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