The Anti-Jacobin Review and Protestant Advocate: Or, Monthly Political and Literary Censor, Volume 17Sherwood, Neely, and Jones, Paternoster-Row, 1803 |
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Page viii
... opinion on the merits of the question to which it referred . This mode of proceeding , however , which , to men of plain sense , not only policy but justice seemed to prescribe , by no means suited the spirit and temper of this ardent ...
... opinion on the merits of the question to which it referred . This mode of proceeding , however , which , to men of plain sense , not only policy but justice seemed to prescribe , by no means suited the spirit and temper of this ardent ...
Page xxi
... opinions which we have thus freely declared , without seeking whom to please , or whom to offend , are the same ... opinion on the subject , but we should have respected his Majesty's choice , and have judged his new minister solely ...
... opinions which we have thus freely declared , without seeking whom to please , or whom to offend , are the same ... opinion on the subject , but we should have respected his Majesty's choice , and have judged his new minister solely ...
Page xxiii
... opinion of them cannot render us blind to the merits of others , or so fascinate our judgment as to prevent us from discerning in the new administration , a sufficient por- tion of talent , knowledge , and experience , to conduct the ...
... opinion of them cannot render us blind to the merits of others , or so fascinate our judgment as to prevent us from discerning in the new administration , a sufficient por- tion of talent , knowledge , and experience , to conduct the ...
Page 11
... opinion , only tends to prove , that there never e ifted fuch an intercourfe between the Cornish and the Danes , as Borlafe and others have imagined . " In all this we fully accord . It is in our opinion perfectly juft . Yet it is as ...
... opinion , only tends to prove , that there never e ifted fuch an intercourfe between the Cornish and the Danes , as Borlafe and others have imagined . " In all this we fully accord . It is in our opinion perfectly juft . Yet it is as ...
Page 13
... opinion.t " We are forry to read this gloomy prefage concerning the taste of the times yet we feel it to be too juft . We hope , however , that it will not prove juft in the reception fhewn to Mr. Polwhele's work . Should it , both ...
... opinion.t " We are forry to read this gloomy prefage concerning the taste of the times yet we feel it to be too juft . We hope , however , that it will not prove juft in the reception fhewn to Mr. Polwhele's work . Should it , both ...
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Popular passages
Page 18 - Me through their word ; that they all may be one ; as Thou, FATHER, art in Me, and I in Thee, that they alfo may be one in Us : that the world may believe that Thou haft fent Me.
Page 207 - If the caufe and end of war,' fays Paley, * be juftifiable, all the means that appear neceflary to that end are juftifiable alfo. This is the principle which defends thofe extremities to which the violence of war ufually proceeds : for fince war is a conteft by force between parties...
Page 55 - First, I learn to believe in God the Father, who hath made me, and all the world. Secondly, in God the Son, who hath redeemed me, and all mankind. Thirdly, in God the Holy Ghost, who sanctifieth me, and all the elect people of God.
Page 307 - ... those who have the distribution of it in their hands ; when a judge is capable of being influenced by any thing but law, or a cause may be recommended by any thing that is foreign to its own merits, we may venture to pronounce that such a nation is hastening to its ruin.
Page 280 - I will never fuffer them to, lall into bale hands : though feparated in body, we are united in mind : I cannot fix any price upon them, and I will make only one condition with, you, that we pa'fs the remainder of our lives together, and that you fhall thus enjoy my books and your own.
Page 114 - Indeed, I am sorry to add, that the charge of cruelty against the French General does not rest here. It having been reported that, previously to the retreat of the French army from Syria, their Commanderin-chief had ordered all the French sick at Jaffa to be poisoned, I was led to make the enquiry to which every one, who should have visited the spot, would naturally have been directed, respecting an act of such injustice and, it should seem, wanton inhumanity.
Page 207 - To thefe and fimilar objections, it was anfwered, that the fafety of the ifland and the lives of the inhabitants were not to be facrificed to the apprehenfion of perverfe mifconftruction or wilful mifreprefentation in the mother country.
Page 282 - Let your light fo fhine before men, that they may fee your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven.
Page 173 - We think the Catholics to be in an error ; they think the same of us ; both ought to reflect that, every error is not a criminal error, and that their error is the greatest, who most err against Christian charity.
Page 405 - ... with gold and jewels and pearls, holding in her hand a golden cup full of abominations and the impurities of her fornication; 5and on her forehead was written a name of mystery: "Babylon the great, mother of harlots and of earth's abominations." 6And I saw the woman, drunk with the blood of the saints and the blood of the martyrs of Jesus.