The Anti-Jacobin Review and Protestant Advocate: Or, Monthly Political and Literary Censor, Volume 1Sherwood, Neely, and Jones, Paternoster-Row, 1799 |
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Page iii
... honour but , if we be true to ourselves , he will try in vain , and his efforts will infallibly end in his own confufion and ruin . We were fully prepared , on the establishment of this work , to encounter the determined hofti- lity of ...
... honour but , if we be true to ourselves , he will try in vain , and his efforts will infallibly end in his own confufion and ruin . We were fully prepared , on the establishment of this work , to encounter the determined hofti- lity of ...
Page vii
... honour which he does not appear to us to deferve ) and feems to con- fider any impeachment of his integrity as an at- tack upon the Church itfelf . Far be it from us to accede to the justice of fuch an interpretation . With the most ...
... honour which he does not appear to us to deferve ) and feems to con- fider any impeachment of his integrity as an at- tack upon the Church itfelf . Far be it from us to accede to the justice of fuch an interpretation . With the most ...
Page 12
... honour . - Nay , I defy the city of Philadelphia , populous as it is , and refpectable as are many of its inhabitants , to produce me a fingle man , who is more fober , industrious , or honeft ; who is a kinder hufband , a tenderer ...
... honour . - Nay , I defy the city of Philadelphia , populous as it is , and refpectable as are many of its inhabitants , to produce me a fingle man , who is more fober , industrious , or honeft ; who is a kinder hufband , a tenderer ...
Page 15
... Honour , the Judge , had been abfent for three years , in the western territory . The lady , fays the ftable - man , is the best of the two , and she has married him , • though bis Honour is ftill living . I need not name the parties ...
... Honour , the Judge , had been abfent for three years , in the western territory . The lady , fays the ftable - man , is the best of the two , and she has married him , • though bis Honour is ftill living . I need not name the parties ...
Page 19
... honour and of duty , → deprives them of all pretenfions to credit , in future . Among the obfervations on Mr. Sheridan's fpeech , on the 14th of December , 1797 , the following are worthy of notice : " The affertions relative to the ...
... honour and of duty , → deprives them of all pretenfions to credit , in future . Among the obfervations on Mr. Sheridan's fpeech , on the 14th of December , 1797 , the following are worthy of notice : " The affertions relative to the ...
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Popular passages
Page 555 - Submit yourfelves to every ordinance of man " for the Lord's fake : whether it be to the King " as fupreme ; or unto Governors, as unto them " that are fent by him for the punifhment of evil " doers, and for the praife of them that do well.
Page 555 - Wilt thou then not be afraid of the power ? Do that which is good, and thou shalt have praise of the same. For he is a minister of God to thee for good. But if thou do that which is evil, be afraid ; for he beareth not the sword in vain: for he is the minister of God, a revenger to execute wrath upon him that doeth evil.
Page 657 - The dominion of speech," he says,2 " is erected upon the downfall of interjections. Without the artful contrivances of language, mankind would have had nothing but interjections with which to communicate, orally, any of their feelings. The neighing of a horse, the lowing of a cow, the barking of a dog, the purring of a cat, sneezing, coughing, groaning, shrieking, and every other involuntary convulsion with oral sound, have almost as good a title to be called parts of speech, as interjections have.
Page 321 - Gratiano speaks an infinite deal of nothing, more than any man in all Venice. His reasons are as two grains of wheat hid in two bushels of chaff : you shall seek all day ere you find them, and when you have them, they are not worth the search.
Page 325 - But valour the stronger grows, The stronger liquor we're drinking. And how can we feel our woes, When we've lost the trouble of thinking? (drinks) AIR LXIII. Joy to great Caesar If thus A man can die Much bolder with brandy. (pours out a bumper of brandy) AIR LXIV. There was an old woman So I drink off this bumper.
Page 538 - Attack them in every direction by day and by night. Avail yourselves of the natural advantages of your country, which are innumerable, and with which you are better acquainted than they. Where you cannot oppose them in full force, constantly harass their rear and their flanks ; cut off their provisions and magazines, and prevent them as much as possible from uniting their forces.
Page 444 - That it was not yet gone so far, but all things might be restored again ; and that, if the soldiers were commanded out of the House, and the mace returned, the public affairs might go on in their course." Cromwell rejected this advice, and called Allen to account for some hundred thousand pounds which, as Treasurer of the army, he had embezzled.
Page 411 - ... inflame, so as to produce an instantaneous explosion, in consequence of which that edifice, the erection of which has been the work of ages, may be overturned in a moment, and so effectually, as that the same foundation can never be built upon again.
Page 295 - that the mass of the people do not care a feather for Catholic emancipation ; neither did they care for parliamentary reform, till it was explained to them as leading to other objects which they did look to, particularly the abolition of tithes.