The British Critic: A New Review, Volume 4F. and C. Rivington, 1815 |
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Page 15
... fact , it is probable , the difficulty before mentioned , has the greatest weight in hindering men from yielding to evil ; I mean the dread of the imputation of cowardice . On this difficulty a good deal has been already said ; but with ...
... fact , it is probable , the difficulty before mentioned , has the greatest weight in hindering men from yielding to evil ; I mean the dread of the imputation of cowardice . On this difficulty a good deal has been already said ; but with ...
Page 19
... fact ; many so marvellous as to be utterly unworthy of credit ; and some carrying with them their own contradiction . Or perhaps observing that Portugal or Na- ples are the only countries our author has visited without publish- ing an ...
... fact ; many so marvellous as to be utterly unworthy of credit ; and some carrying with them their own contradiction . Or perhaps observing that Portugal or Na- ples are the only countries our author has visited without publish- ing an ...
Page 21
... fact , however incredi- ble it may appear , that Fleury , then above seventy years of age , carried his presumption still further with respect to Maria Luzinska . ( Queen of Louis the 15th . ) I shall not relate the particulars . That ...
... fact , however incredi- ble it may appear , that Fleury , then above seventy years of age , carried his presumption still further with respect to Maria Luzinska . ( Queen of Louis the 15th . ) I shall not relate the particulars . That ...
Page 26
... facts , with which he might and ought to be acquainted . " - " Chronological errors , as Sir Nathaniel afterwards with great justice observes , " are not to be treated as of little moment . " And now let us earnestly solicit the ...
... facts , with which he might and ought to be acquainted . " - " Chronological errors , as Sir Nathaniel afterwards with great justice observes , " are not to be treated as of little moment . " And now let us earnestly solicit the ...
Page 29
... fact he has more than counterbalanced every paragraph enumerative of the King's virtues by quoting some galling invectives from Junius , forgetting that the last words of a sen- tence are best remembered by the generality of readers ...
... fact he has more than counterbalanced every paragraph enumerative of the King's virtues by quoting some galling invectives from Junius , forgetting that the last words of a sen- tence are best remembered by the generality of readers ...
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