The Universal Magazine, Volume 31805 |
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Page 2
... prove himself in it . Giving no reafon at fired Earl Cornwallis to acquire as high a all would have been better . War can ftation as poffible , in order to stop their only be contemplated without horror on retreat . No letter , order ...
... prove himself in it . Giving no reafon at fired Earl Cornwallis to acquire as high a all would have been better . War can ftation as poffible , in order to stop their only be contemplated without horror on retreat . No letter , order ...
Page 3
... prove them before a public tribunal . On his return from Egypt , he purchased the lieutenant- colonelcy of his regiment , which , foon after the peace , was reduced . Until the beginning of the prefent year he remain- ed on half - pay ...
... prove them before a public tribunal . On his return from Egypt , he purchased the lieutenant- colonelcy of his regiment , which , foon after the peace , was reduced . Until the beginning of the prefent year he remain- ed on half - pay ...
Page 6
... proves that he is not inca- pable of the higher and more effential parts of hiftory . The government and the nation ... prove to us that nothing but abfolute dominion over our foil and our lives will fatisfy them ? " Sir Robert W , has ...
... proves that he is not inca- pable of the higher and more effential parts of hiftory . The government and the nation ... prove to us that nothing but abfolute dominion over our foil and our lives will fatisfy them ? " Sir Robert W , has ...
Page 10
... prove ; this is fo flagrant an error , whole may be tedious , but it will be and fo very ftrange an overlight , that the fairett procefs , in order to arrive I cannot but wonder it should have at the truth ; for nothing can be more ...
... prove ; this is fo flagrant an error , whole may be tedious , but it will be and fo very ftrange an overlight , that the fairett procefs , in order to arrive I cannot but wonder it should have at the truth ; for nothing can be more ...
Page 28
... prove that killing one's felf is not committing murder , then I think , and not till then , we may allow that fuicide is no crime . Aber , a village equally diftant from Conway and Bangor , is likewife cele- brated for having afforded a ...
... prove that killing one's felf is not committing murder , then I think , and not till then , we may allow that fuicide is no crime . Aber , a village equally diftant from Conway and Bangor , is likewife cele- brated for having afforded a ...
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Popular passages
Page 352 - But though vers'd in th' extremes both of Pleasure and Pain, I am still but too ready to feel them again. If then for this once in my Life I am free, And escape from a Snare might catch wiser than me, Tis that Beauty alone but imperfectly charms, For though Brightness may dazzle, 'tis Kindness that warms. As on Suns in the Winter with Pleasure we gaze, But feel not their force, though their Splendour we praise ; So Beauty our just Admiration may claim, But Love, and Love only, our Hearts can inflame.
Page 352 - Is't reason ? No : that my whole life will belie, For who so at variance as reason and I ? Is't ambition that fills up each chink of my heart, Nor allows any softer sensation a part ? Oh no ! for in this all the world must agree, One folly was never sufficient for me.
Page 352 - I've felt each reverse that from fortune can flow. That I've tasted each bliss that the happiest know, Has still been the whimsical fate of my life, Where anguish and joy have been evtr at strife. But, though vers'd in th' extremes both of pleasure and pain, I am still but too ready to feel them again.
Page 197 - SIR, — His Majesty has thought proper to order a new commission of the Treasury to be made out, in which I do not perceive your name.
Page 275 - ... Lord Teignmouth, President of the British and Foreign Bible Society, occasioned by his address to the clergy of the Church of England, by a Country Clergyman [the Eev.
Page 352 - I've tasted each bliss that the happiest know, Has still been the whimsical fate of my life, Where anguish and joy have been ever at strife. But, tho' vers'd in th' extremes both of pleasure and pain, I am still but too ready to feel them again. If then, for this once in my life, I am free, And escape from a snare might catch wiser than me, 'Tis that beauty alone but imperfectly charms, For, though brightness may dazzle, 'tis kindness that warms.
Page 527 - The picture, in water colours, of Boys with the Insignia of Riches. The Companion with Boys, and the Insignia of the Fine Arts.— All painted for the Marble Gallery in Windsor Castle. Designs, from -which the Ceiling in the Queen's Lodge was done; all 3 feet 6y 4.
Page 370 - Lord Chief Justice of the Court of King's Bench. The whole now first collected and revised; to which are prefixed his Life and Death, by Bishop Burnett, DD and an Appendix -to the Life, including the additional Notes of Richard Baxter, by the Rev.
Page 229 - Author of our being as the reward of virtue, and the solace of care ; but the base and sordid forms of artificial (which I oppose to natural) society, in which we live, have encircled that heavenly rose with so many thorns, that the wealthy alone can gather it with prudence. On the other hand, mere pleasure, to which the idle are not justly entitled, soon satiates, and leaves a vacuity in the mind more unpleasant than actual pain.