Fraser's Magazine, 98. sējumsLongmans, Green, and Company, 1878 |
No grāmatas satura
1.–5. rezultāts no 68.
22. lappuse
... hour , to the solstitial rains of Abyssinia ; ' whilst the Indus has its springs amid the rains and snows of the Himalayas . Not only is it certain , as matter of scientific theory , that the internal waters of a country are fed solely ...
... hour , to the solstitial rains of Abyssinia ; ' whilst the Indus has its springs amid the rains and snows of the Himalayas . Not only is it certain , as matter of scientific theory , that the internal waters of a country are fed solely ...
52. lappuse
... hours , fashionable dresses , and rouge were execrated ; in short , there was a general enthusiasm for nature and virtue , an enthusiasm which seems to have had but little effect on things artificial and vicious . These doctrines of ...
... hours , fashionable dresses , and rouge were execrated ; in short , there was a general enthusiasm for nature and virtue , an enthusiasm which seems to have had but little effect on things artificial and vicious . These doctrines of ...
76. lappuse
... hour to get hot water and pro- cure me medicine . I could not leave my bed till past six Monday evening , when I crawled out in order to see Charles Lamb , and to afford him such poor comfort as my society might perhaps do in the ...
... hour to get hot water and pro- cure me medicine . I could not leave my bed till past six Monday evening , when I crawled out in order to see Charles Lamb , and to afford him such poor comfort as my society might perhaps do in the ...
77. lappuse
... hours Sincerely yours , S. T. COLERIDGE . DEAR MISS BETHAM , -Not my will , but accident and necessity , made me a truant from my promise . I was to have left Merton , in Surrey , at half - past eight on Tuesday morning with a Mr. Hall ...
... hours Sincerely yours , S. T. COLERIDGE . DEAR MISS BETHAM , -Not my will , but accident and necessity , made me a truant from my promise . I was to have left Merton , in Surrey , at half - past eight on Tuesday morning with a Mr. Hall ...
78. lappuse
... hour and a half on Clap- ham Common in an act of mere humanity indeed a most affecting one , and not unin- structive , if to know by facts the dreadfully degraded and hardened hearts of the in- habitants of cities and their suburbs may ...
... hour and a half on Clap- ham Common in an act of mere humanity indeed a most affecting one , and not unin- structive , if to know by facts the dreadfully degraded and hardened hearts of the in- habitants of cities and their suburbs may ...
Citi izdevumi - Skatīt visu
Bieži izmantoti vārdi un frāzes
Armenian artistic Asia Minor Bacon beautiful Besançon better boat Burmah Burmese Burney caimacam called capital carried cent character Chinese Christian church civilisation colonies colour composers cost course Diarbekir district Doubs Empire engineer England English existence fact Farinelli favour feeling foreign France Franche-Comté French friends garden give Government hand Imperial India interest Italian Italy kazas kind King labour land less living look Lord matter means ment miles Montbéliard moral Mosul native nature nearly Negro never Norway opera Paris perhaps population Porte present province question race railway Rangoon Rayah regard religious river sanjaks schools seems side singers Smyrna social South Wales Storthing Syria Thames things thought tion town traffic train traveller Turkey turn vilayet village whole workhouse XVIII.-NO
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9. lappuse - The subjects of every state ought to contribute towards the support of the government, as nearly as possible, in proportion to their respective abilities; that is, in proportion to the revenue which they respectively enjoy under the protection of the state.
14. lappuse - Can there be a more proper time to force them to maintain an army at their expense, than when that army is necessary for their own protection, and we are utterly unable to support it ? Lastly, can there be a more proper time for this mother country to leave off feeding out of her own vitals these children whom she has nursed up, than when they are arrived at such strength and maturity as to be well able to provide for themselves, and ought rather with filial duty to give some assistance to her distress...
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