The Edinburgh Review, Volume 38A. and C. Black, 1823 |
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Página 14
... effect of the revocation was to spread a general jealou- sy and alarm among those who held the lands of the Church , and who were resolved not to abandon without contest , the pos- sessions , of which , whatever might have been the ...
... effect of the revocation was to spread a general jealou- sy and alarm among those who held the lands of the Church , and who were resolved not to abandon without contest , the pos- sessions , of which , whatever might have been the ...
Página 30
... effect - with such vividness of conception , such insatiable ambition after ornament , and such an inexhaustible and delightful play of fancy . Mr Moore is a colourist in poetry , a musician also , and has a heart full of tenderness and ...
... effect - with such vividness of conception , such insatiable ambition after ornament , and such an inexhaustible and delightful play of fancy . Mr Moore is a colourist in poetry , a musician also , and has a heart full of tenderness and ...
Página 52
... effect of correcting the mistakes into which readers hereafter might otherwise have been led ; and this kind of gene- ral notice , seems all that is required to prevent the unjust im- pression which might have prevailed without it . To ...
... effect of correcting the mistakes into which readers hereafter might otherwise have been led ; and this kind of gene- ral notice , seems all that is required to prevent the unjust im- pression which might have prevailed without it . To ...
Página 55
... effect ; and that which had become a mo tion of course by the recent change of ministry , and was carried unanimously , is represented as the unexpected effect of Mr Grattan's speech . But all other faults shrink into nothing when seen ...
... effect ; and that which had become a mo tion of course by the recent change of ministry , and was carried unanimously , is represented as the unexpected effect of Mr Grattan's speech . But all other faults shrink into nothing when seen ...
Página 58
... effect ; for they frequently come upon us without the least warning , and before we have time to reflect , the speaker is in the midst of another matter ; a defect ( if it be one ) common to Mr Grattan and the great orators of ancient ...
... effect ; for they frequently come upon us without the least warning , and before we have time to reflect , the speaker is in the midst of another matter ; a defect ( if it be one ) common to Mr Grattan and the great orators of ancient ...
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