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 31
... natural eloquence , warm with the best feelings , and dignified by lofty and benevolent views of human nature , place her ( in our judgment at least ) above all her predecessors , and what is far more , above all her contemporaries . To ...
... natural eloquence , warm with the best feelings , and dignified by lofty and benevolent views of human nature , place her ( in our judgment at least ) above all her predecessors , and what is far more , above all her contemporaries . To ...
Page 35
... nature , enables them , in all civilized nations , to dispense the lesser honours of social life . That support is ... natural subject of conversation . Their society is no longer an asylum for ignorance , and any one that is desirous to ...
... nature , enables them , in all civilized nations , to dispense the lesser honours of social life . That support is ... natural subject of conversation . Their society is no longer an asylum for ignorance , and any one that is desirous to ...
Page 41
... nature purely ecclesiastical , should originate with laymen confessedly friendly to the Church establish- ment that it should derive no assistance or support from an order of men whose office and station require them more especially to ...
... nature purely ecclesiastical , should originate with laymen confessedly friendly to the Church establish- ment that it should derive no assistance or support from an order of men whose office and station require them more especially to ...
Page 42
... nature , we are left almost to conjecture the causes of this opposition ; and as far as our fancy or the occasional hints of conversation will supply us , we shall proceed to consider the grounds upon which , we imagine , the bill was ...
... nature , we are left almost to conjecture the causes of this opposition ; and as far as our fancy or the occasional hints of conversation will supply us , we shall proceed to consider the grounds upon which , we imagine , the bill was ...
Page 43
... nature are infringements on the right of private property . Between church property and private freeholds there is this material differ- ence : the one is absolute the other conditional . The rights both of patron and incumbent are by ...
... nature are infringements on the right of private property . Between church property and private freeholds there is this material differ- ence : the one is absolute the other conditional . The rights both of patron and incumbent are by ...
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