The British Critic: A New Review, Volume 4F. and C. Rivington, 1815 |
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Page 26
... leave the reader to apply to him his own censure on biographers , who are guilty of inaccuracy and neglect , and who commit errors from an ignorance of facts with which they might and ought to be acquainted . " Upon the delicate subject ...
... leave the reader to apply to him his own censure on biographers , who are guilty of inaccuracy and neglect , and who commit errors from an ignorance of facts with which they might and ought to be acquainted . " Upon the delicate subject ...
Page 29
... leave the reader at a loss to know whether his object be censure or commendation ; and at another , under the appearance of panegyric conveys the severest sarcasms . The latter offence however we attribute to inadvertency . We acquit ...
... leave the reader at a loss to know whether his object be censure or commendation ; and at another , under the appearance of panegyric conveys the severest sarcasms . The latter offence however we attribute to inadvertency . We acquit ...
Page 31
... leave nothing but what , from the evidence of his own senses , he knows to be true . It may reduce , perhaps , the size of his work , but we do not think that it will lessen its value . Bu ART . III . Sermons , for Parochial and ...
... leave nothing but what , from the evidence of his own senses , he knows to be true . It may reduce , perhaps , the size of his work , but we do not think that it will lessen its value . Bu ART . III . Sermons , for Parochial and ...
Page 43
... leave nor forsake + " his faithful followers : and in a fit of irritation , or a season of de- spondency and despair , too often the lamentable consequence of his * 1 Pet , v . 6 , 7 . + Heb . xiii , 5 . OWN own previous wickedness ...
... leave nor forsake + " his faithful followers : and in a fit of irritation , or a season of de- spondency and despair , too often the lamentable consequence of his * 1 Pet , v . 6 , 7 . + Heb . xiii , 5 . OWN own previous wickedness ...
Page 66
... leave it to our readers to apply them , as we advance in our out- line of the history and the details . The Poem opens with the union of the Lombards with Didier their king , and the Iconoclast Greeks under the walls of Spoleto . Longin ...
... leave it to our readers to apply them , as we advance in our out- line of the history and the details . The Poem opens with the union of the Lombards with Didier their king , and the Iconoclast Greeks under the walls of Spoleto . Longin ...
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