The Anti-Jacobin Review and Magazine, Numéros 95 à 98J. Whittle, 1806 |
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Page 20
... seem the most inattentive to eternal things , are very far from being sceptics , and never once entertained a doubt concerning the ex- istence of a future state , where a just remuneration of human conduct shall take place . This ...
... seem the most inattentive to eternal things , are very far from being sceptics , and never once entertained a doubt concerning the ex- istence of a future state , where a just remuneration of human conduct shall take place . This ...
Page 24
... seem to consider ( with good reason ) the idleness of the lower Irish to arise in some measure , from the ease with ... seems to have forgotten , that confiscation of property , in consequence of treason , was formerly , and still is ...
... seem to consider ( with good reason ) the idleness of the lower Irish to arise in some measure , from the ease with ... seems to have forgotten , that confiscation of property , in consequence of treason , was formerly , and still is ...
Page 25
which , in p . 81 of the first volume , he seems so triumphantly to refer . I trespass thus on my readers , because , although the picture was drawn for the natives in Queen Elizabeth's time , I am sorry to be obliged to observe , that ...
which , in p . 81 of the first volume , he seems so triumphantly to refer . I trespass thus on my readers , because , although the picture was drawn for the natives in Queen Elizabeth's time , I am sorry to be obliged to observe , that ...
Page 26
... seem to have been pointedly calculated to insult the feelings of the Irish nation , and consequently to inflame their animosity and ran- cour ; " and the reasons which he assigns are , " that it enumerates all his acts of outrage and ...
... seem to have been pointedly calculated to insult the feelings of the Irish nation , and consequently to inflame their animosity and ran- cour ; " and the reasons which he assigns are , " that it enumerates all his acts of outrage and ...
Page 53
... seems only to have been administered for the purpose of extortion and injus tice . No wonder , then , that Sir Ralph Abercromby should perceive the danger of leaving the colony any longer in such a state ; and , at the same time , the ...
... seems only to have been administered for the purpose of extortion and injus tice . No wonder , then , that Sir Ralph Abercromby should perceive the danger of leaving the colony any longer in such a state ; and , at the same time , the ...
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