History of the Regency and Reign of King George the Fourth, Parts 2-3; Part 8 |
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... why the work is written and published ; and , second , to describe to him the manner in which it is done , and to apprize him of other circumstances the want of a previous knowledge of which might produce inconvenience to him 2.
... why the work is written and published ; and , second , to describe to him the manner in which it is done , and to apprize him of other circumstances the want of a previous knowledge of which might produce inconvenience to him 2.
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His business is to show his readers what has been done , and what are , or were , the effects of it : what were the measures of the reign of which he is the historian , and in what way , and to what extent , they produced happiness or ...
His business is to show his readers what has been done , and what are , or were , the effects of it : what were the measures of the reign of which he is the historian , and in what way , and to what extent , they produced happiness or ...
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THAT change in the religion of England , which took place in the reigns of Henry VIII . , Edward VI . , and Elizabeth , and which is generally called the REFORMATION , has produced , in process of time , a still greater , and a most ...
THAT change in the religion of England , which took place in the reigns of Henry VIII . , Edward VI . , and Elizabeth , and which is generally called the REFORMATION , has produced , in process of time , a still greater , and a most ...
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In the first place it took a tenth part of the whole of the produce of the earth , and out of it relieved the wants of the poor , the aged , the widow , and the orphan : next , the celibacy of the clergy , that is of the great mass of ...
In the first place it took a tenth part of the whole of the produce of the earth , and out of it relieved the wants of the poor , the aged , the widow , and the orphan : next , the celibacy of the clergy , that is of the great mass of ...
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The Reformation broke up this state of society in England ; and it has , at last , produced that state which we now behold ; a state . of rack - renters , of paupers , and of an aristocracy making the laws and burdening the commons ...
The Reformation broke up this state of society in England ; and it has , at last , produced that state which we now behold ; a state . of rack - renters , of paupers , and of an aristocracy making the laws and burdening the commons ...
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