The Quarterly Review, Volumes 70-71John Murray, 1842 |
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Page 12
... reader ceded to then - their domestic pursuits , studies , and fling it from him with wonder and disgust . The ... readers against supposing that they will find what we speak of in a late trumpery publication of the Edinburgh press ...
... reader ceded to then - their domestic pursuits , studies , and fling it from him with wonder and disgust . The ... readers against supposing that they will find what we speak of in a late trumpery publication of the Edinburgh press ...
Page 14
... readers to it . That both in a moral and a religious point of view it is a subject of the deepest import- ance none can doubt ; and it deserves , consequently , the calm attention of the political economist . English feelings and ...
... readers to it . That both in a moral and a religious point of view it is a subject of the deepest import- ance none can doubt ; and it deserves , consequently , the calm attention of the political economist . English feelings and ...
Page 19
... readers in regular or nearly regular succession , a series of Essays treat- ing on high and important questions of morality , social arrangement , and the merits of established works of literature . We can hardly believe that such a ...
... readers in regular or nearly regular succession , a series of Essays treat- ing on high and important questions of morality , social arrangement , and the merits of established works of literature . We can hardly believe that such a ...
Page 21
... readers . Very many are the instances in which young men , the whole of whose vacant time was formerly spent in the alehouse , have shaken off their habits of intemperance and become zealous and regular students . Great judgment has ...
... readers . Very many are the instances in which young men , the whole of whose vacant time was formerly spent in the alehouse , have shaken off their habits of intemperance and become zealous and regular students . Great judgment has ...
Page 25
... readers will not deem us presumptuous if , in giving them an ac- count of its rise and progress , we at the same ... reader , as well as to the ardent student . The only method indeed by which such a plan can be pro- perly executed is to ...
... readers will not deem us presumptuous if , in giving them an ac- count of its rise and progress , we at the same ... reader , as well as to the ardent student . The only method indeed by which such a plan can be pro- perly executed is to ...
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