The Edinburgh Review, Volume 10A. and C. Black, 1807 |
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Página 71
... occasion , to discuss the comparative merits of the poets of the East and West . What- ever may be the charms of Persian poetry , the language is not likely ever to be studied by the literati of Europe ; and their poets will ...
... occasion , to discuss the comparative merits of the poets of the East and West . What- ever may be the charms of Persian poetry , the language is not likely ever to be studied by the literati of Europe ; and their poets will ...
Página 75
... occasion a defalcation of revenue . The difficulty of drawing any additional revenue from taxes on confumption , plainly appears from the change which of late years has been introduced into our fyftem of taxation . Great part of the ...
... occasion a defalcation of revenue . The difficulty of drawing any additional revenue from taxes on confumption , plainly appears from the change which of late years has been introduced into our fyftem of taxation . Great part of the ...
Página 79
... occasion , during the first ten years , any very great addition to the existing taxes , as in the years 1807 and 1808 annuities will expire to the amount of 385,5151 . The charge of the first three years is to be defrayed wholly from ...
... occasion , during the first ten years , any very great addition to the existing taxes , as in the years 1807 and 1808 annuities will expire to the amount of 385,5151 . The charge of the first three years is to be defrayed wholly from ...
Página 94
... occasion . It does not signify any such thing when prefixed to a man's proper name ; and though it might have been used at first out of servility with a view to that relation , it is long since that connexion has been lost ; and it now ...
... occasion . It does not signify any such thing when prefixed to a man's proper name ; and though it might have been used at first out of servility with a view to that relation , it is long since that connexion has been lost ; and it now ...
Página 116
... occasion to speak of the Gael , and of the bard of Morven ; and he rejects the poems which bear his name , in a manner the most peremp- tory and consequential . We can , however , give the admirers of the Caledonian bard the comfort of ...
... occasion to speak of the Gael , and of the bard of Morven ; and he rejects the poems which bear his name , in a manner the most peremp- tory and consequential . We can , however , give the admirers of the Caledonian bard the comfort of ...
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