The London Quarterly Review, Volume 33Theodore Foster, 1826 |
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Pagina 7
... death by the law of the land for their crimes ; " " to call a man one of Fox's saints , is become the same as to call him a great rogue . " The same gentleman * enumerates the different crimes for which offenders have been tried at the ...
... death by the law of the land for their crimes ; " " to call a man one of Fox's saints , is become the same as to call him a great rogue . " The same gentleman * enumerates the different crimes for which offenders have been tried at the ...
Pagina 8
... death , saw six of his companions , already dead , come to him one after another . The first was Dudley , Earl of Leicester , all in fire ; the second was Secretary Walsingham , also in fire and flame ; the third , Pickering , so cold ...
... death , saw six of his companions , already dead , come to him one after another . The first was Dudley , Earl of Leicester , all in fire ; the second was Secretary Walsingham , also in fire and flame ; the third , Pickering , so cold ...
Pagina 15
... death , is perverted into a proof of her having been guilty of some secret and more cruel injury , than their ownt calumnies can afford any ground for believing . The few indiscreet speeches which she confessed , considering the manners ...
... death , is perverted into a proof of her having been guilty of some secret and more cruel injury , than their ownt calumnies can afford any ground for believing . The few indiscreet speeches which she confessed , considering the manners ...
Pagina 16
... death , to what she believed was his general disposition ; such more than ordinary charity did not deserve so perverse an interpre- tation . The reach of Shakspeare's powerful genius , when he would re- present the amiable virtues of ...
... death , to what she believed was his general disposition ; such more than ordinary charity did not deserve so perverse an interpre- tation . The reach of Shakspeare's powerful genius , when he would re- present the amiable virtues of ...
Pagina 18
... death of their royal brother , strove to exclude them both from the throne , and to place Lady Jane Grey upon it , we must admit the justice of the ver- dict , and pronounce him guilty both of ingratitude and high treason . Still the ...
... death of their royal brother , strove to exclude them both from the throne , and to place Lady Jane Grey upon it , we must admit the justice of the ver- dict , and pronounce him guilty both of ingratitude and high treason . Still the ...
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Abbé Albigenses ancient Angrogna Anne Boleyn appears argument Arian Aristophanes Athens Audoin believe Bishop body Boudh Burmans cause century character Christian church circumstances Cochin-China consider contagious court Cranmer Cyprian death Demosthenes dicasts disease divine doctrine effect England English evidence fact faith father favour feelings give Greek MSS ground hand Holy honour human impotent poor interest Isocrates Judson king labour Lady Castlemaine land Latin letter living Lord Lysias Manicheans matter means ment mind mode moral nation nature never object observed occasion opinion passage Pepys persecution persons Piedmont plague Pomaretto poor Pope present priests principles produced proof Protestant racter Rangoon readers reason religion Roman Catholic says scarcely Scripture seventh verse Sister Nativity Spain spirit supposed Tertullian testimony things tion truth Vaudois Walafrid Strabo Waldenses whole witness words writings XXXIII