The Edinburgh Review: Or Critical Journal, Bind 76A. Constable, 1843 |
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Side 11
... Tory . This is the whole extent of his offence . His opinions are displayed with sufficient fairness , if not always with per- fect taste and modesty ; -he does not permit them to pervert his statements of facts , though he seldom loses ...
... Tory . This is the whole extent of his offence . His opinions are displayed with sufficient fairness , if not always with per- fect taste and modesty ; -he does not permit them to pervert his statements of facts , though he seldom loses ...
Side 12
... Tory press fifty years ago . We confess that we always considered it strange language to come from shrewd , sensible men of the world- from men who , when reasoning on the crimes and follies of social life , would have been the first to ...
... Tory press fifty years ago . We confess that we always considered it strange language to come from shrewd , sensible men of the world- from men who , when reasoning on the crimes and follies of social life , would have been the first to ...
Side 33
... tory there have been men , deficient neither in sense nor in honesty , who thought that the growth of liberty should have stopped short precisely when they first became acquainted with it . Such were the men who would have rejected the ...
... tory there have been men , deficient neither in sense nor in honesty , who thought that the growth of liberty should have stopped short precisely when they first became acquainted with it . Such were the men who would have rejected the ...
Side 34
... tory of that period , will appear strange language . A court intrigue cut short the triumphs of Chatham by an abrupt and inglorious peace . Those of Wellington were achieved by the high qualities of a single individual , in spite of the ...
... tory of that period , will appear strange language . A court intrigue cut short the triumphs of Chatham by an abrupt and inglorious peace . Those of Wellington were achieved by the high qualities of a single individual , in spite of the ...
Side 35
... tory of the national debt . Its present state he is inclined to view in the most gloomy light ; but this feeling of despondency by no means interferes with his admiration of the statesman to whose unparalleled profusion we owe its ...
... tory of the national debt . Its present state he is inclined to view in the most gloomy light ; but this feeling of despondency by no means interferes with his admiration of the statesman to whose unparalleled profusion we owe its ...
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2d edition action Admiral Alison appear authority believe Berryer boards body British Burney Calotype camera obscura Captain cause character Christian Church Church of England civil cloth coloured command constitution court Daguerre Daguerreotype daugh defence doctrine doubt Duke duty effect enemy England English existence favour feel fleet France Frances Burney French French Revolution friends give Grignan honour human India interest judge justice Keppel King labours less letter light Lord Lord Keppel Lord Sandwich LXXVI Madame de Sévigné Mademoiselle ment mind minister moral nation nature never object opinion paper Paris party persons picture plates political Post 8vo practical present principles private judgment readers remarkable Revolution Robespierre sewed Sewell ship Sir Edward Hawke Sir Robert Peel spirit success supposed thing tion Torbay Tory trial truth vols Whig whole writer