The Port FolioEditor and Asbury Dickens, 1816 - Philadelphia (Pa.) |
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Page 128
... considered the matter in different lights , saying , " not to mention that this treasure is not the patri- mony of my ancestors , yet , allowing that it were so , how came their son to know nothing about it ; nor my kindred to contend ...
... considered the matter in different lights , saying , " not to mention that this treasure is not the patri- mony of my ancestors , yet , allowing that it were so , how came their son to know nothing about it ; nor my kindred to contend ...
Page 166
... considered me , on his part , as an oppressive aristo- cratic man , who made my rank in society , and in the army , the means of galling those whom circumstances placed beneath me : and if he discovered my silly jealousy , he probably ...
... considered me , on his part , as an oppressive aristo- cratic man , who made my rank in society , and in the army , the means of galling those whom circumstances placed beneath me : and if he discovered my silly jealousy , he probably ...
Page 205
... considered necessary to prepare the mind by intense reflection , a profound investigation of the subject , and a strict adherence to the Horatian rule . Then indeed was a li- terary execution a most awful , because a rare and notorious ...
... considered necessary to prepare the mind by intense reflection , a profound investigation of the subject , and a strict adherence to the Horatian rule . Then indeed was a li- terary execution a most awful , because a rare and notorious ...
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