The Edinburgh Review: Or Critical Journal, Volumen 76A. Constable, 1843 |
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... character for preserva- tion , his earnest seriousness of manner , and his obvious honesty of purpose - all combine ... characters , which abound throughout his work . With all our respect for his merits as a historian , we are bound to ...
... character for preserva- tion , his earnest seriousness of manner , and his obvious honesty of purpose - all combine ... characters , which abound throughout his work . With all our respect for his merits as a historian , we are bound to ...
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... character of individuals , may have the greatest effect in exciting or restraining popular revenge . We need not remind our readers of the various unhappy coincidences which combined to increase the natural resentment of the French ...
... character of individuals , may have the greatest effect in exciting or restraining popular revenge . We need not remind our readers of the various unhappy coincidences which combined to increase the natural resentment of the French ...
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... character of the then existing generation of Frenchmen more truly than Mr Fox . But if future ages see in the French Revolution a shock which , dread- ful as it was , saved France from hopeless and lingering decay , they will scarcely ...
... character of the then existing generation of Frenchmen more truly than Mr Fox . But if future ages see in the French Revolution a shock which , dread- ful as it was , saved France from hopeless and lingering decay , they will scarcely ...
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... character that the comparative wisdom of the rival statesmen must be tried . It may be true that Mr Fox was induced , late and reluctantly , to despair of French liberty . But it was not the turbulence of the Revolution which changed ...
... character that the comparative wisdom of the rival statesmen must be tried . It may be true that Mr Fox was induced , late and reluctantly , to despair of French liberty . But it was not the turbulence of the Revolution which changed ...
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... character , moral in- fluence , and peculiar constitution , of the British aristocracy . That body , splendid and powerful as it is , has for ages been so intimately blended with the middle classes , and so frequently recruited from ...
... character , moral in- fluence , and peculiar constitution , of the British aristocracy . That body , splendid and powerful as it is , has for ages been so intimately blended with the middle classes , and so frequently recruited from ...
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2d edition action Admiral Alison appear authority believe Berryer boards body British Burney Calotype camera obscura Captain cause character Christian Church Church of England civil cloth coloured command constitution court Daguerre Daguerreotype daugh defence doctrine doubt Duke duty effect enemy England English existence favour feel fleet France Frances Burney French French Revolution friends give Grignan honour human India interest judge justice Keppel King labours less letter light Lord Lord Keppel Lord Sandwich LXXVI Madame de Sévigné Mademoiselle ment mind minister moral nation nature never object opinion paper Paris party persons picture plates political Post 8vo practical present principles private judgment readers remarkable Revolution Robespierre sewed Sewell ship Sir Edward Hawke Sir Robert Peel spirit success supposed thing tion Torbay Tory trial truth vols Whig whole writer