The Quarterly Review, Volume 68J. Murray, 1841 |
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Page 117
... equally so . He de- scribes also the beautiful state of cultivation into which the island had been brought , smiling with the finest crops of wheat and maize ; everything seemed , in his opinion , to promise the triumph of the ...
... equally so . He de- scribes also the beautiful state of cultivation into which the island had been brought , smiling with the finest crops of wheat and maize ; everything seemed , in his opinion , to promise the triumph of the ...
Page 339
... equally good for one where it cannot be obtained - whether a body of freeholders , entirely controlled by the curses of their priest , is equally calculated to give effect to the principle of popular repre- sentation , with a body who ...
... equally good for one where it cannot be obtained - whether a body of freeholders , entirely controlled by the curses of their priest , is equally calculated to give effect to the principle of popular repre- sentation , with a body who ...
Page 527
... equally , unjust . The statesman who is equally open to the instruction of experience , and to the danger of temerity , may no doubt err sometimes - but he has got the key to the golden mean by which alone , in times of conflicting ...
... equally , unjust . The statesman who is equally open to the instruction of experience , and to the danger of temerity , may no doubt err sometimes - but he has got the key to the golden mean by which alone , in times of conflicting ...
Contents
No | 1 |
Notes on the United States By the Right Hon | 20 |
in the British Colonies Ordered by the House | 88 |
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