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 6
... perhaps something like what I have felt , for he has brought with him his wife and children , and we em- bark to - morrow , if the wind serves . My heart bleeds for them . ' After this separation , Lady Cornwallis declared to her con ...
... perhaps something like what I have felt , for he has brought with him his wife and children , and we em- bark to - morrow , if the wind serves . My heart bleeds for them . ' After this separation , Lady Cornwallis declared to her con ...
Page 14
... perhaps in his pay . The violent animosity between you and General Medows was among the most current . your letters have given a fatal blow to that forgery . I have received one from Medows , in which he speaks of your Lordship in the ...
... perhaps in his pay . The violent animosity between you and General Medows was among the most current . your letters have given a fatal blow to that forgery . I have received one from Medows , in which he speaks of your Lordship in the ...
Page 40
... perhaps no means but that of lying down with fallen Ireland and recording upon her tomb my dying testimony against the flagitious corruption that has murdered her independence . . The right honourable gentleman has suggested examples ...
... perhaps no means but that of lying down with fallen Ireland and recording upon her tomb my dying testimony against the flagitious corruption that has murdered her independence . . The right honourable gentleman has suggested examples ...
Page 69
... perhaps best do justice to the editions of Mr. Dyce and Mr. Collier , if we follow their variations of text through one consecutive act of a play , and note as we pass whatever is suggested by the MS . Corrector . We cannot be more ...
... perhaps best do justice to the editions of Mr. Dyce and Mr. Collier , if we follow their variations of text through one consecutive act of a play , and note as we pass whatever is suggested by the MS . Corrector . We cannot be more ...
Page 70
... & c . The Corrector , in a fit of dulness , wishes to read loaded ; and Mr. Collier thinks ' lorded may perhaps stand without material objection . ' The The next MS . emendation is adopted by Mr. Collier 70 Dyce's Shakespeare .
... & c . The Corrector , in a fit of dulness , wishes to read loaded ; and Mr. Collier thinks ' lorded may perhaps stand without material objection . ' The The next MS . emendation is adopted by Mr. Collier 70 Dyce's Shakespeare .
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