The Quarterly Review, Volume 72J. Murray, 1843 |
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Page 112
... letter from each at the commencement of the book , make it easy to believe that their characters , as given by Mr. Leonard Horner , have not been over - coloured by filial partiality . In that of the father there is a tone of good sense ...
... letter from each at the commencement of the book , make it easy to believe that their characters , as given by Mr. Leonard Horner , have not been over - coloured by filial partiality . In that of the father there is a tone of good sense ...
Page 517
... letter - writers between whom and Walpole - magis pares quam similes - we can admit any propinquity of merit . But it is not , we say , for the mere merits of his style that Walpole's letters are , we think , destined , more surely ...
... letter - writers between whom and Walpole - magis pares quam similes - we can admit any propinquity of merit . But it is not , we say , for the mere merits of his style that Walpole's letters are , we think , destined , more surely ...
Page 518
... letters , which we have happened to see , bear all the appearance of a neat , slow , and even laborious penmanship ) - so voluminous a correspondence ? In the quarto edition of his works , published in 1798 by Mr. Berry and his daughter ...
... letters , which we have happened to see , bear all the appearance of a neat , slow , and even laborious penmanship ) - so voluminous a correspondence ? In the quarto edition of his works , published in 1798 by Mr. Berry and his daughter ...
Contents
The Lady of the Manor Being a Series of Conversations | 25 |
Peregrine Bunce By the Author of Sayings | 53 |
Memoirs and Correspondence of Francis Horner M | 108 |
Copyright | |
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