The National Quarterly Review, Volume 11 |
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Pagina 3
Such is the tone in which a work embodying the careful researches for years of a profound scholar are received by a journal which , for various reasons , ought to be the first to recognise their value . " The Milesian fables of the ...
Such is the tone in which a work embodying the careful researches for years of a profound scholar are received by a journal which , for various reasons , ought to be the first to recognise their value . " The Milesian fables of the ...
Pagina 8
Besides being splendidly entertained in the castle to which they were attached , they received valuable presents . None aware of these well - attested facts are disposed to doubt the genuineness of the best of the poems attributed by ...
Besides being splendidly entertained in the castle to which they were attached , they received valuable presents . None aware of these well - attested facts are disposed to doubt the genuineness of the best of the poems attributed by ...
Pagina 16
The testimony of one entertaining such an opinion would not be received in a court of justice against priests ; even a juryman must be without prejudice in order to agree to a fair verdict ; if he admits that he is prejudiced ...
The testimony of one entertaining such an opinion would not be received in a court of justice against priests ; even a juryman must be without prejudice in order to agree to a fair verdict ; if he admits that he is prejudiced ...
Pagina 17
Others were bled to death , and their blood , being received in basins , served to sprinkle their altars . Some were stabbed to the heart , that by the direction in which ( after the fatal stroke ) the body fell , either to the right or ...
Others were bled to death , and their blood , being received in basins , served to sprinkle their altars . Some were stabbed to the heart , that by the direction in which ( after the fatal stroke ) the body fell , either to the right or ...
Pagina 24
By no other means could he expect to justify the cruel treatment they received at his hands , as well as at those of every other Roman general who attempted to subdue the Gauls . It was so universally known that po sect were more ...
By no other means could he expect to justify the cruel treatment they received at his hands , as well as at those of every other Roman general who attempted to subdue the Gauls . It was so universally known that po sect were more ...
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The National Quarterly Review, Volume 4 Edward Isidore Sears,David Allyn Gorton,Charles H. Woodman Volledige weergave - 1862 |
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