| Alexander Pope - 1812 - 322 pages
...like a Knight of the Shire, or a Burgess of a Corporation, that represented a great many individuals. His father asked him, if he could not frame the idea of an uniTersal lord mayor ? Martin told him, that, never having seen but one lord mayor, the idea of that... | |
| Thomas Brown - 1822 - 546 pages
...like a knight of a shire, or a burgess of a corporation, that represented a great man\ individuals. His father asked him, if he could not frame the idea of an universal lord mayor ? Martin told him, that, never having seen but one lord mayor, the idea of that lord mayor always returned... | |
| Alexander Pope - 1822 - 416 pages
...like a Knight of the Shire, or a Burgess of a Corporation, that represented a great many Individuals. His Father asked him, if he could not frame the Idea of a Universal Lord Mayor ? Martin told him, that, never having seen but one Lord Mayor, the Idea of that... | |
| Alexander Pope - 1822 - 412 pages
...like a Knight of the Shire, or a Burgess of a Corporation, that represented a great many Individuals. His Father asked him, if he could not frame the Idea of a Universal Lord Mayor? Martin told him, that, never having seen but one Lord Mayor, the Idea of that... | |
| Alexander Pope, William Roscoe - 1824 - 518 pages
...like a knight of the shire, or a burgess of a corporation, that represented a great many individuals. His father asked him, if he could not frame the idea of an universal Lord Mayor ? Martin told him, that, never having seen but one Lord Mayor, the idea of that Lord Mayor always returned... | |
| Alexander Pope, William Roscoe - 1824 - 606 pages
...substance than he was; for his clothes could better subsist without him, than he without his clothes. father asked him, if he could not frame the idea of an universal Lord Mayor ? Martin told him, that, never having seen but one Lord Mayor, the idea of that Lord Mayor always returned... | |
| Thomas Brown - 1833 - 800 pages
...knight of a shire, or a burgess of a corporation, that represented a great many individuals. His lather asked him, if he could not frame the idea of an universal lord mayor ? Martin told him, that, never having seen but one lord mayor, the idea of that lord mayor always returned... | |
| Henry O'CONNOR (Barrister-at-Law) - 1837 - 376 pages
...like a knight of the shire, or a burgess of a corporation, that represented a great many individuals. His father asked him, if he could not frame the idea of an UNIVERSAL LORD MAYOR? Martin told him, that, never having seen but one lord mayor, the idea of that lord mayor always returned... | |
| Sharon Turner - 1839 - 532 pages
...the schoolmen, which dis- fie PHItinguished them into the two classes of Realists and Nominalists. The first contending, that what they called an universal,...from the Arabian, AL-GAZEL," and from the two British " AL-GAZEL, ON THE UNIVERSALS. OF the ' intentio,'-which is called an Universal, its being is in the... | |
| Cornelius Webbe - 1845 - 398 pages
...means of rendering the unfortunate fortunate, and the unhappy happy. MY FIRST LORD MAYOR'S SHOW. " His father asked him if he could not frame the idea of an universal Lord Mayor? Martin told him that, never having seen but one Lord Mayor, the idea of that Lord Mayor always returned... | |
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