The Quarterly Review, Volumes 79-81William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, John Murray, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1847 |
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Page 9
... circumstances Mon- as this scheme appeared , nay , desperate as trose , far from pushing forward to Stirling , Montrose's detractors call it to this day , could not even maintain his position at Dum- the necessities of Charles left him ...
... circumstances Mon- as this scheme appeared , nay , desperate as trose , far from pushing forward to Stirling , Montrose's detractors call it to this day , could not even maintain his position at Dum- the necessities of Charles left him ...
Page 10
... circumstances that the Marquis displayed know my noble Lord of Montrose ? But go his commission from King Charles , and first your way , and God be with you wheresoever raised the Royal Standard . The spot is still you go ! ' The poor ...
... circumstances that the Marquis displayed know my noble Lord of Montrose ? But go his commission from King Charles , and first your way , and God be with you wheresoever raised the Royal Standard . The spot is still you go ! ' The poor ...
Page 36
... Circumstances induce formal a preface ; but we must apologise Mr. Barclay , a wealthy West India mer- also for its being too late . The book was chant ( now rara avis ! ) , to withdraw from published two years ago , but we never the ...
... Circumstances induce formal a preface ; but we must apologise Mr. Barclay , a wealthy West India mer- also for its being too late . The book was chant ( now rara avis ! ) , to withdraw from published two years ago , but we never the ...
Page 59
... circumstances , when reflected from any surface , is capable of being reflected again from another surface , or of passing directly through any transparent substance . But let this ray of light be sub- mitted to a single reflection at ...
... circumstances , when reflected from any surface , is capable of being reflected again from another surface , or of passing directly through any transparent substance . But let this ray of light be sub- mitted to a single reflection at ...
Page 61
... circumstances of relation , in which the experiment places them - and this view was in some degree inculcated by the title of the paper , in its more literal interpretation . Further con- sideration , however , soon suggested the need ...
... circumstances of relation , in which the experiment places them - and this view was in some degree inculcated by the title of the paper , in its more literal interpretation . Further con- sideration , however , soon suggested the need ...
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Addington Admiral admit appears Bank Bank of England Brenton called Captain cause character Charles Church circulation circumstances colour Corn Laws course Court Darius doubt dress Duke duty Earl effect England English fact father favour feeling Flechier force France French friends gentlemen Gil Vicente give Government Grands Jours hand honour hope House inscriptions interest Iolair Ireland Irish King King's labour lady land less letter light look Lord John Russell Lord Sidmouth magnetic Marquis marriage matter ment mind minister Montrose moral nature never officers Parliament party passed Peel's perhaps person Pitt Pitt's Polonius present Prince principle racter readers remarkable respect Roman Rome royal Scotland seems sion Sir Robert Peel spirit things thought tion Treaty of Utrecht truth Vestiarium Scoticum whole