London Magazine Enlarged and Improved, Volumen 23C. Ackers, 1754 |
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Página 8
... Henry IV . gave it to William lord Stanley in 1405 , but the Scots ftill making pretensions to it , the owners were A obliged to keep troops to defend it till the reign of K. James I. and it continued in the Stanley's earls of Derby ...
... Henry IV . gave it to William lord Stanley in 1405 , but the Scots ftill making pretensions to it , the owners were A obliged to keep troops to defend it till the reign of K. James I. and it continued in the Stanley's earls of Derby ...
Página 25
... Henry IV . The follow- ing quotation from a fmall piece of his , called the Envious Man and the Mifer , may fhew , that he was not , as Winstanly fays , a refiner of our language , but , on the other hand , that poetry owes him Of ...
... Henry IV . The follow- ing quotation from a fmall piece of his , called the Envious Man and the Mifer , may fhew , that he was not , as Winstanly fays , a refiner of our language , but , on the other hand , that poetry owes him Of ...
Página 32
... Henry VIII . The government has , within thefe few years , bought more ground for additional works ; and there is no doubt but it may be made impregnable , for a fhallow water may be brought quite round it . The yards , the docks , the ...
... Henry VIII . The government has , within thefe few years , bought more ground for additional works ; and there is no doubt but it may be made impregnable , for a fhallow water may be brought quite round it . The yards , the docks , the ...
Página 33
... Henry VII . confiderably aufg- mented them , Charles II . much improved C them , and James II . greatly added to them . The docks and yards are now like a town by themfelves ; there being par- ticular large rows of dwellings , built at ...
... Henry VII . confiderably aufg- mented them , Charles II . much improved C them , and James II . greatly added to them . The docks and yards are now like a town by themfelves ; there being par- ticular large rows of dwellings , built at ...
Página 34
• 34 IRELAND compared to bottled WINE . In the time of Henry VIII . Gerald , earl of Kildare bottled up the champaign ; but that refolute monarch drew the corks and faved the breaking of the bottles . The wine was pretty quiet till the ...
• 34 IRELAND compared to bottled WINE . In the time of Henry VIII . Gerald , earl of Kildare bottled up the champaign ; but that refolute monarch drew the corks and faved the breaking of the bottles . The wine was pretty quiet till the ...
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Pasajes populares
Página 172 - Whose herds with milk, whose fields with bread, Whose flocks supply him with attire; Whose trees in summer yield him shade, In winter, fire. Blest, who can unconcern'dly find Hours, days, and years, slide soft away In health of body; peace of mind; Quiet by day ; Sound sleep by night; study and ease Together mix'd; sweet recreation, And innocence, which most does please With meditation.
Página 216 - I think there is. Every one has an undoubted right to think freely — nay, it is the duty of every one to do so as far as he has the necessary means and opportunities. This duty, too, is in no case so incumbent on him as in those that regard what I call the first philosophy. They who have neither means nor opportunities of this sort must submit their opinions to authority; and to what authority can they resign...
Página 262 - G — they would do it ; for that, although they were sensible the English could raise two men for their one, yet they knew their motions were too slow and dilatory to prevent any undertaking of theirs. They pretend to have an undoubted right to the river from a discovery made by one La Salle...
Página 538 - Nay, more ; I will not only obey him like an old Roman, as my dictator, but, like a modern Roman, I will implicitly believe in him as my Pope, and hold him to be infallible while in the chair, but no longer. More than this he cannot well require ; for, I presume, that obedience can never be expected, when there is neither terror to enforce, nor interest to invite it.
Página 262 - Delawares, &.c. together at that place; and told them, that they intended to have been down the river this fall, but the waters were growing cold, and the winter advancing, which obliged them to go into quarters ; but that they might assuredly expect them in the spring, with a far greater...
Página 443 - My friend was ashamed of me; but however, to help me off as well as he could, he said to me aloud, "Mr. Fitz-Adam, this is one of those singularities which you have contracted by living so much alone.
Página 538 - I HEARD the other day with great pleasure from my worthy friend Mr. Dodsley, that Mr. Johnson's English Dictionary, with a grammar and history of our language prefixed, will be published this winter in two large volumes in folio. I had long lamented that we had no lawful...
Página 262 - ... in each. The first of them is on French creek, near a small lake, about sixty miles from Venango, near...
Página 114 - To make up one Hermaphrodite ; Still amorous, and fond, and billing, Like Philip and Mary on a shilling...
Página 209 - ... to replace to the finking fund the like fum paid out of the fame, to make good the deficiency on the...