The United States Literary Gazette, Band 3Cummings, Hilliard, & Company, 1826 |
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Seite 9
... received him kindly , but with that composure which in danger he never lost for a moment . To escape from this vast region of calamities , it was further neces- sary to pass a long convoy of powder which was defiling amidst the fire ...
... received him kindly , but with that composure which in danger he never lost for a moment . To escape from this vast region of calamities , it was further neces- sary to pass a long convoy of powder which was defiling amidst the fire ...
Seite 12
... receiving no stipend from the College nor living in Cam- bridge . Of these five Fellows , two have usually , since 1806 , been settled clergymen , of high standing in the profession , and three have as usually been lawyers or civil ...
... receiving no stipend from the College nor living in Cam- bridge . Of these five Fellows , two have usually , since 1806 , been settled clergymen , of high standing in the profession , and three have as usually been lawyers or civil ...
Seite 27
... received it , assured me that it was a very melancholy and dolorous little ditty , and an old friend of mine - a bachelor - thought it quite too solemn for so joyful an occasion , as that of a man's getting well out of one of love's by ...
... received it , assured me that it was a very melancholy and dolorous little ditty , and an old friend of mine - a bachelor - thought it quite too solemn for so joyful an occasion , as that of a man's getting well out of one of love's by ...
Seite 34
... receiving in Eng- land the commendation which it so eminently deserves , and has already ' received in our own country . QUARTERLY LIST OF NEW PUBLICATIONS . One hundred and thirty 34 [ Oct. 1 , INTELLIGENCE .
... receiving in Eng- land the commendation which it so eminently deserves , and has already ' received in our own country . QUARTERLY LIST OF NEW PUBLICATIONS . One hundred and thirty 34 [ Oct. 1 , INTELLIGENCE .
Seite 43
... received by polished nations now , than when originally spring- ing forth in pristine beauty from their chisels . And to the Greeks , indeed , we must acknowledge ourselves indebted for the basis of all that decorative taste and ...
... received by polished nations now , than when originally spring- ing forth in pristine beauty from their chisels . And to the Greeks , indeed , we must acknowledge ourselves indebted for the basis of all that decorative taste and ...
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