The Gentleman's Magazine, Volume 164A. Dodd and A. Smith, 1838 The "Gentleman's magazine" section is a digest of selections from the weekly press; the "(Trader's) monthly intelligencer" section consists of news (foreign and domestic), vital statistics, a register of the month's new publications, and a calendar of forthcoming trade fairs. |
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Page 6
... took up ( he says ) my politics at that period , as King Charles the Second did his religion , from an idea that the cavalier creed was the more gentleman- like persuasion of the two . In the mean while my acquaintance with English lite ...
... took up ( he says ) my politics at that period , as King Charles the Second did his religion , from an idea that the cavalier creed was the more gentleman- like persuasion of the two . In the mean while my acquaintance with English lite ...
Page 10
... took up his residence for the second time at Holyrood House . Finding that one or two of these gentlemen could speak no English at all , he made some efforts to amuse them in their own language after the champagne had been passing ...
... took up his residence for the second time at Holyrood House . Finding that one or two of these gentlemen could speak no English at all , he made some efforts to amuse them in their own language after the champagne had been passing ...
Page 25
... took in their own paper ; an example of the danger of dependence on any class . Soon after I joined the Morning Post in the au- tumn of 1795 , Christie , the auctioneer , left it on account of its low sale , and left a blank , a ruinous ...
... took in their own paper ; an example of the danger of dependence on any class . Soon after I joined the Morning Post in the au- tumn of 1795 , Christie , the auctioneer , left it on account of its low sale , and left a blank , a ruinous ...
Page 26
... took from me my chief assistant , George Lane ; supposing that , having got him , they got the Morning Post , and that I was nobody . Mr. Lane , as he owned , was indebted to me for all he knew of newspapers . At first he was slow and ...
... took from me my chief assistant , George Lane ; supposing that , having got him , they got the Morning Post , and that I was nobody . Mr. Lane , as he owned , was indebted to me for all he knew of newspapers . At first he was slow and ...
Page 38
... took place somewhat suddenly from malignant fever , and was fol- lowed by circumstances which exposed the lover to a trial , perhaps the most severe to which a man of ardent feel- ing was ever subjected . He was in the country , and his ...
... took place somewhat suddenly from malignant fever , and was fol- lowed by circumstances which exposed the lover to a trial , perhaps the most severe to which a man of ardent feel- ing was ever subjected . He was in the country , and his ...
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