The Monthly review. New and improved ser, Opseg 281799 |
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Stranica 20
... perusal of Captain Vancouver's narrative , it will obviously strike the reader , that it is too much encumbered with nautical and geographical accounts . Some are necessary to make the details clear and intelligible : but more than is ...
... perusal of Captain Vancouver's narrative , it will obviously strike the reader , that it is too much encumbered with nautical and geographical accounts . Some are necessary to make the details clear and intelligible : but more than is ...
Stranica 42
... perusal . We shall , however , just mention that the memoir contains three new and very important facts ; first ; the existence , in these mi- neral waters , of a triple salt consisting of the oxymuriates of iron and manganese ...
... perusal . We shall , however , just mention that the memoir contains three new and very important facts ; first ; the existence , in these mi- neral waters , of a triple salt consisting of the oxymuriates of iron and manganese ...
Stranica 70
... perusal of the kingdom at large , judgment is required . It is not ( as Mr. Young remarks ) easy to conceive an undertaking more difficult , than to give such an account of a province , as shall on on the one hand be minute enough to ...
... perusal of the kingdom at large , judgment is required . It is not ( as Mr. Young remarks ) easy to conceive an undertaking more difficult , than to give such an account of a province , as shall on on the one hand be minute enough to ...
Stranica 80
... perusal of the observations on these two plays , it has been with us a subject of regret , that the editor has not re- corded all the authors who have cited verses from them , or * This edition of Aldus bears the date of MDI . It ...
... perusal of the observations on these two plays , it has been with us a subject of regret , that the editor has not re- corded all the authors who have cited verses from them , or * This edition of Aldus bears the date of MDI . It ...
Stranica 88
... perusal from the readers of this passage in the Hecuba . · Mr. W. commends Mr. P. for observing that in adjectivo παρωα contineri substantivum πατηρ , quo refertur αυτος . Mr. P. , he adds , gives three examples of this schema , but has ...
... perusal from the readers of this passage in the Hecuba . · Mr. W. commends Mr. P. for observing that in adjectivo παρωα contineri substantivum πατηρ , quo refertur αυτος . Mr. P. , he adds , gives three examples of this schema , but has ...
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acid anapest antient appears Aristophanes Boards body called Captain Vancouver cause character church circumstances coast colour considerable considered contains Corundum Cow-pox disease effect endeavours England English equal Euripides examination experiments favour fluxions former French give given Hecuba human inflammation inoculated instance Ireland island kind knowlege labours land language letter Lord Lord Bolingbroke manner means memoir ment mentioned merit mind mode Monody nations natives nature nitric acid Nootka Sound object observations occasion opinion oxygen parliament passage persons perusal phlogiston poem Porson present principles produced proposed prove quantity readers reason religion remarks respect says seems shew ships side Small-pox Sophocles sufficient Suidas supposed tained tion translation Troad truth union Valckenaer variolous verse vessels vitreous humour volume Wakefield whole wish words writer δὲ καὶ
Popularni odlomci
Stranica 176 - A perfect Judge will read each work of Wit With the same spirit that its author writ: Survey the Whole, nor seek slight faults to find Where nature moves, and rapture warms the mind; Nor lose, for that malignant dull delight, The gen'rous pleasure to be charm'd with wit.
Stranica 187 - In those very writings which Grotius is gravely blamed for having quoted. The usages and laws of nations, the events of history, the opinions of philosophers, the sentiments of orators and poets, as well as the observation of common life, are, in truth, the materials out of which the science of morality is formed ; and those who neglect them are justly chargeable with a vain attempt to philosophise without regard to fact and experience, — the sole foundation of all true philosophy.
Stranica 397 - Beyond the pomp of dress ; for loveliness Needs not the foreign aid of ornament, But is, when unadorned, adorned the most ; Thoughtless of beauty, she was Beauty's self, Recluse amid the close-embowering woods.
Stranica 185 - The reduction of the law of nations to a system was reserved for Grotius. It was by the advice of Lord Bacon and Peiresc that he undertook this arduous task. He produced a work which we now indeed justly deem imperfect, but which is perhaps the most complete that the world has yet owed, at so early a stage in the progress of any science, to the genius and learning of one man.
Stranica 327 - Z 4 arrivf, arrive, which are predicted in the scriptures, when "the nations shall beat their swords into plow-shares and their spears into pruning hooks ; and they shall learn war no more.
Stranica 186 - The sagacity of his numerous and fierce adversaries could not discover a blot on his character ; and in the midst of all the hard trials and galling provocations of a turbulent political life, he never once deserted his friends when they were unfortunate, nor insulted his enemies when they were weak.
Stranica 45 - The face of a laurel-leaf ( Prunus Lauroteraius) is a good match to a stick of red sealing-wax ; and the back of the leaf answers to the lighter red of wafers.
Stranica 186 - As to those who first used this language, the most candid supposition that we can make with respect to them is, that they never read the work ; for, if they had not been deterred from the perusal of it by such a formidable display of Greek characters, they must soon have discovered that Grotius never quotes on any subject till he has first appealed to some principles, and often, in my humble opinion, though not always, to the soundest and most rational principles. But another sort of answer is due...
Stranica 186 - ... of my readers only by name. Yet, if we fairly estimate both his endowments and his virtues, we may justly consider him as one of the most memorable men who have done honour to modern times. He combined the discharge of the most important duties of active and public life with the attainment of that exact and various learning which is generally the portion only of the recluse student. He was distinguished as an advocate and a magistrate, and he composed the most valuable works on the law of his...
Stranica 188 - Grotius seems to have been the first who attempted to give the world any thing like a system of those principles which ought to run through, and be the foundation of, the laws of all nations...