The Universal magazine, Volume 7 |
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Page 10
Four millions are given to Austria with the apprehensions of a Prussia , two millions to Silesia , up- rival . His war in Silesia gained him wards of two millions to the Elec- that rich province , which after the torate , Pomerania ...
Four millions are given to Austria with the apprehensions of a Prussia , two millions to Silesia , up- rival . His war in Silesia gained him wards of two millions to the Elec- that rich province , which after the torate , Pomerania ...
Page 15
... in which Egypt was he has hitherto unlawfully retained ; included , will never be given up . and we shall applaud that temerity However gigantic , and even roman- which often , in the midst of perils , is tic his Eastern speculation ...
... in which Egypt was he has hitherto unlawfully retained ; included , will never be given up . and we shall applaud that temerity However gigantic , and even roman- which often , in the midst of perils , is tic his Eastern speculation ...
Page 16
... in 1685 , which he characand moment of such a design , if your terises as " by far the best , and containreaders are told , that two selections ing a treatise of erudition and good of this nature have been given in the criticism .
... in 1685 , which he characand moment of such a design , if your terises as " by far the best , and containreaders are told , that two selections ing a treatise of erudition and good of this nature have been given in the criticism .
Page 38
Few modern wives , we suspect , employ themselves , like stance however , as it appears to have given him an early bias towards the profession in which he afterwards ex- celled , and for which his name has been transmitted down to us by ...
Few modern wives , we suspect , employ themselves , like stance however , as it appears to have given him an early bias towards the profession in which he afterwards ex- celled , and for which his name has been transmitted down to us by ...
Page 40
government , he found as much satis- From this custom of wearing their hair , faction as he gave , and never had oc- that name of Roundhead became the casion to number his marriage among scornful term given to the whole parhis ...
government , he found as much satis- From this custom of wearing their hair , faction as he gave , and never had oc- that name of Roundhead became the casion to number his marriage among scornful term given to the whole parhis ...
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Popular passages
Page 228 - The gorse is yellow on the heath, The banks with speedwell flowers are gay, The oaks are budding; and beneath, The hawthorn soon will bear the wreath, The silver wreath of May.
Page 269 - OSSIAN. The Poems of Ossian in the Original Gaelic. With a Literal Translation into English, and a Dissertation on the Authenticity of the Poems.
Page 346 - The scene of the Picture is laid in that part of the road to Canterbury which commands a view of the Dulwich hills — the time, a beautiful and serene April morning. The interest of the Procession is considerably heightened by the cheerfulness of the accompanying landscape. The Pilgrims are grouped with a decorum suited to their respective characters, and in the order in which we may suppose Chaucer himself to have seen them, headed by the Miller, playing upon his pipe, under the guidance of Harry...
Page 56 - The evidence that there is a Being, all-powerful, wise, and good, by whom every thing exists ; and particularly, to obviate difficulties regarding the wisdom and goodness of the Deity ; and this, in the first place, from considerations independent of written revelation, and, in the second place, from the Revelation of the Lord Jesus ; and from the whole, to point out the inferences most necessary for and useful to mankind.
Page 375 - I was soon convinced that my means were unequal to a regular siege; the only prospect of success that presented itself was, to erect a battery as near as possible to a wall by the south gate, that joins the works to the sea, and endeavour to breach it.
Page 228 - twere mark'd in written page, Translate the wild bird's song. I wish I did his power possess, •";?• That I might learn, fleet bird, from thee, What our vain systems only guess, And know from what wide wilderness You came across the sea.
Page 114 - Take care of my dear Lady Hamilton, Hardy; take care of poor Lady Hamilton. Kiss me, Hardy,
Page 139 - French languages: the earliest known instance of the English tongue having been used in deeds, is that of the indenture between the abbot and convent of Whitby, and Robert, the son of John Bustard, dated at York, in the year 1343. The English tongue was ordered to be used in all law pleadings in 1364. Ordered to be used in all law-suits in May, 1731.
Page 129 - A sporting tour through various parts of France, in the year 1802 : including a concise description of the sporting establishments, mode of hunting, and other field amusements, as practised in that country,...
Page 114 - Hardy within the first hour-and-aquarter of this period. A partial cannonade, however, was still maintained, in consequence of the enemy's running ships passing the British at different points ; and the last distant guns which were fired at their van ships that were making off, were heard a minute or two before his lordship expired.