The Anti-Jacobin Review and Magazine, Numéros 95 à 98J. Whittle, 1806 |
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Page 43
... language of travellers , who , in general are more anxious to excite wonder , than to convey information . I never saw an elephant eleven feet high , and I have seen some thousands . The Nawab gives ex- travagant high prices for the ...
... language of travellers , who , in general are more anxious to excite wonder , than to convey information . I never saw an elephant eleven feet high , and I have seen some thousands . The Nawab gives ex- travagant high prices for the ...
Page 46
... language the varnish of falsehood ; he had his frailties ; and who is without them ? but an avowed admiration of the fruits of theft and murder , without a detesta- tion of the thief and assassin , was certainly not one of them . We do ...
... language the varnish of falsehood ; he had his frailties ; and who is without them ? but an avowed admiration of the fruits of theft and murder , without a detesta- tion of the thief and assassin , was certainly not one of them . We do ...
Page 49
... language , we should have instantly fixed the scene in revolutionary France , and have considered Fouquier Tinville as the hero of the piece . But compelled as we are , by incontrovertible evidence , to ac- knowledge that we are awake ...
... language , we should have instantly fixed the scene in revolutionary France , and have considered Fouquier Tinville as the hero of the piece . But compelled as we are , by incontrovertible evidence , to ac- knowledge that we are awake ...
Page 54
... languages enabled him to do . Among others , he particularly con- sulted a Spanish gentleman , named DON CHRISTOVAL DE ROBLES , < who had lived more than half a century in Trinidad , and who was universally esteemed for his probity and ...
... languages enabled him to do . Among others , he particularly con- sulted a Spanish gentleman , named DON CHRISTOVAL DE ROBLES , < who had lived more than half a century in Trinidad , and who was universally esteemed for his probity and ...
Page 58
... language of justice , or of truth ? Either he must know that the facts were , as they were supposed , stated , or understood to be ; or that they were not ; else his inquisitorial powers must have been exerted to very little purpose ...
... language of justice , or of truth ? Either he must know that the facts were , as they were supposed , stated , or understood to be ; or that they were not ; else his inquisitorial powers must have been exerted to very little purpose ...
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