The Quarterly Review, Volumes 98-99John Murray, 1856 |
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Page 8
... rendering of the first period . The diseur was in his glory . M. de Bautru , M. Ménage himself is not exactly a diseur Ménage tells us , was invited everywhere like the Prince de Guémené or M. de Bau- for the sake of his bons - mots ...
... rendering of the first period . The diseur was in his glory . M. de Bautru , M. Ménage himself is not exactly a diseur Ménage tells us , was invited everywhere like the Prince de Guémené or M. de Bau- for the sake of his bons - mots ...
Page 15
... render a tithe of the service to the world that was conferred on it by the Laird of Auchinleck ? Johnson's conversation is the perfection of the talk of a man of letters ; and if , as we believe , the test of Table - Talk be its ...
... render a tithe of the service to the world that was conferred on it by the Laird of Auchinleck ? Johnson's conversation is the perfection of the talk of a man of letters ; and if , as we believe , the test of Table - Talk be its ...
Page 18
... render- ing them more cautious to undertake no injudicious , schemes which might bring dis- credit their cause . Such persons will have a wholly different class of trials to bear if public feeling should take an ex- actly opposite ...
... render- ing them more cautious to undertake no injudicious , schemes which might bring dis- credit their cause . Such persons will have a wholly different class of trials to bear if public feeling should take an ex- actly opposite ...
Page 27
... rendered it less necessary for the association to provide for the children of convicts , while the demands for admission on the part of juvenile criminals themselves had largely increased . The girls ' school , which had long been ...
... rendered it less necessary for the association to provide for the children of convicts , while the demands for admission on the part of juvenile criminals themselves had largely increased . The girls ' school , which had long been ...
Page 35
... render it probable that parents may be encouraged to neglect their children , and to allow them to run into mischief , in the hope that they will ultimately be taken off their hands . We do not say they would deliberately encourage them ...
... render it probable that parents may be encouraged to neglect their children , and to allow them to run into mischief , in the hope that they will ultimately be taken off their hands . We do not say they would deliberately encourage them ...
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