The Quarterly Review, Volume 10William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) John Murray, 1814 |
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Page 2
... equally vexatious in finding those means more re- stricted than before ; and the native subjects will be left in a more hopeless condition as to any increased demand for the produce of their manufacture and agriculture than under the ...
... equally vexatious in finding those means more re- stricted than before ; and the native subjects will be left in a more hopeless condition as to any increased demand for the produce of their manufacture and agriculture than under the ...
Page 8
... equally so that , when it was wanted , those which were already planted would be grubbed up . If , indeed , food should not naturally have the preference , still it might be expected that men would plant the soil with that which would ...
... equally so that , when it was wanted , those which were already planted would be grubbed up . If , indeed , food should not naturally have the preference , still it might be expected that men would plant the soil with that which would ...
Page 28
... Equally favourable , we understand , are the reports of the Ramil- lies , which is fitted on the same principle . The strength of this ship was submitted to a very severe test ; her bowsprit , a lever of prodigious power , her foremast ...
... Equally favourable , we understand , are the reports of the Ramil- lies , which is fitted on the same principle . The strength of this ship was submitted to a very severe test ; her bowsprit , a lever of prodigious power , her foremast ...
Page 31
... equally little to boast of . They had indeed some Memoirs which are still read as forming part of the history of the age , and the classical labours of that dullest of pedants Madame D'Acier ; but the age of Lewis XIV . so fertile in ...
... equally little to boast of . They had indeed some Memoirs which are still read as forming part of the history of the age , and the classical labours of that dullest of pedants Madame D'Acier ; but the age of Lewis XIV . so fertile in ...
Page 34
... equally accomplished , he feels no pride , because he enjoys no superiority . The compa- rison that produces pride , and laziness , and discontent , is made , not between himself and the occupation , but between himself and the other ...
... equally accomplished , he feels no pride , because he enjoys no superiority . The compa- rison that produces pride , and laziness , and discontent , is made , not between himself and the occupation , but between himself and the other ...
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