The Edinburgh Magazine, Or, Literary Miscellany, Bind 11J. Sibbald, Parliament-Square, 1798 |
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Side 94
... fenfe , manifefted in your letter , concerning your future eftablishment . It is true , fignor Apoft . Zeno had a penfion of four thousand florins per annum ; but this high falary was granted to him in confequence of his being imperial ...
... fenfe , manifefted in your letter , concerning your future eftablishment . It is true , fignor Apoft . Zeno had a penfion of four thousand florins per annum ; but this high falary was granted to him in confequence of his being imperial ...
Side 100
... fenfe . These are fevere charges , and it becomes our poets , if they are what they ought to be , jealous for the ho- nour of Parnaffus , to vindicate them- · of his heart , he thinks he has execut felves 100 On Modern Song - Writing ...
... fenfe . These are fevere charges , and it becomes our poets , if they are what they ought to be , jealous for the ho- nour of Parnaffus , to vindicate them- · of his heart , he thinks he has execut felves 100 On Modern Song - Writing ...
Side 101
... fenfe of what was not fenfe before -Having a few nights ago been prefent at a little concert of amateurs , I could not refrain from making fome of the remarks which I have given above , and likewife from taking an opportunity to examine ...
... fenfe of what was not fenfe before -Having a few nights ago been prefent at a little concert of amateurs , I could not refrain from making fome of the remarks which I have given above , and likewife from taking an opportunity to examine ...
Side 103
... fenfe . Manly fenfe is too harsh and ftubborn to go through the number- lefs divifions and fub - divifions of mo- dern mufic , and to be trilled forth in crotchets and demiquavers . For this reafon thought is fo cautiously fprink- led ...
... fenfe . Manly fenfe is too harsh and ftubborn to go through the number- lefs divifions and fub - divifions of mo- dern mufic , and to be trilled forth in crotchets and demiquavers . For this reafon thought is fo cautiously fprink- led ...
Side 106
... fenfe of the neceffity of keeping up appearances - I fay , I would fain know , how you can pro- pofe to keep up appearances , and give up the two principal means by which appearances are to be kept up ? Do you not know that the re ...
... fenfe of the neceffity of keeping up appearances - I fay , I would fain know , how you can pro- pofe to keep up appearances , and give up the two principal means by which appearances are to be kept up ? Do you not know that the re ...
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Addrefs againſt alfo becauſe Bill cafe Capt caufe circumftances Columba Committee confequence confiderable confidered confifting conftitution daugh daughter defire Ditto Edinburgh Evan Nepean expence faid fame fecond feemed feen fenfe fent ferved feven feveral fhall fhip fhould fide fince fion firft firſt fituation fmall fociety fome foon fpirit French friends ftate ftill ftudies fubject fuch fuffered fufficient fupport fure herſelf hiftory himſelf honour Houfe houſe ifland increaſe intereft itſelf John King Lady laft late lefs letter loft Lord lord chamberlain mafter Majefty Majefty's meaſure ment Mifs minifter moft moſt muft neceffary North Briton obferved occafion paffed perfons Petrarch pleaſure poffeffed prefent propofed purpoſe raiſed reafon refidence refolution refpect rofe Ruffia ſhe Sir Robert Walpole thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe thouſand tion ufually uſed veffel vifit vols Weft whofe Wilkes
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Side 379 - All kinds of sores and shames on my bare head, Steep'd me in poverty to the very lips, Given to captivity me and my utmost hopes, I should have found in some place of my soul A drop of patience...
Side 313 - PITT moved the order of the day, for the Houfe to refolve itfelf into a Committee of the whole Houfe to confider of Ways and Means for railing a fupply granted to His Majefty.
Side 427 - I took as much delight in reading as you do ; it would be the means of alleviating many tedious hours in my present retirement. But, to my misfortune, I derive no pleasure from such pursuits.
Side 126 - His drawings almost rest on this quality alone for their value ; but possessing it in an eminent degree — and as no drawing can have any merit where it is wanting — his works, therefore, in this branch of the art, approach nearer to perfection than his paintings.
Side 445 - A physician in a great city seems to be the mere plaything of fortune; his degree of reputation is, for the most part, totally casual — they that employ him know not his excellence; they that reject him know not his deficience. By any acute observer who had looked on the transactions of the medical world for half a century a very curious book might be written on the "Fortune of Physicians.
Side 294 - Wade's boy hearing of his son's illness, answered with indifference, ' that he could do nothing for him," and left him to his fate. The other, when the accounts reached him, hurried down, and watching for a favourable moment, crawled on all-fours along the weather gunwale to his son, who was in the mizen rigging.
Side 383 - When at last I was forced from my Sheelah to part, She said, (while the sorrow was big at her heart,) Oh ! remember your Sheelah when far, far away : And be kind, my dear Pat, to our poor dog Tray.
Side 412 - ... she made it so invariable a rule never to refuse a desire of the King, that every morning at Richmond she walked several miles with him ; and more than once, when she had the gout in her foot, she dipped her whole leg in cold water to be ready to attend him. The pain, her bulk, and the exercise, threw her into such fits of perspiration as vented the gout; but those exertions hastened the crisis of her distemper.
Side 443 - The portico is at once elegant and august ; and if the steps arising from the street to the front could have been made regular, and on a line from end to end, it would have given it a very considerable grace : but, as the situation of the ground would not allow it, this is to be esteemed a misfortune rather than a fault.
Side 334 - This impatience to reach Osnaburg induced the attendants not to stop at Ippenburen, but to hasten on in hopes of arriving at that city before he died. But it was too late. The exact time and place of his death cannot be ascertained ; but it is most probable that he expired either...