The London review, conducted by R. Cumberland, Volume 1Richard Cumberland 1809 |
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Page 34
... suppose the existence of some , such influence , unless there can be imagined any other way , by which the exact resemblance which one description bears to the other , could have been produced . Nor is it only in their account of the ...
... suppose the existence of some , such influence , unless there can be imagined any other way , by which the exact resemblance which one description bears to the other , could have been produced . Nor is it only in their account of the ...
Page 41
... suppose some such disposition , in order to account for a curious blunder he has made on a subject , which it was na- tural to expect he would have understood even better than the laws and ordinances of chivalry . It respects one of the ...
... suppose some such disposition , in order to account for a curious blunder he has made on a subject , which it was na- tural to expect he would have understood even better than the laws and ordinances of chivalry . It respects one of the ...
Page 88
... suppose there be strong symptoms of a revolt in a plantation , is it not wrong to take from the proprietor a severity which might be the salva- tion of his family , and of general benefit to the colony ? Humanity , however , prevailed ...
... suppose there be strong symptoms of a revolt in a plantation , is it not wrong to take from the proprietor a severity which might be the salva- tion of his family , and of general benefit to the colony ? Humanity , however , prevailed ...
Page 109
... suppose the play would be popular ? Or when she allows also , that " incidents must be numerous , however unconnected , " to please a London audience , who seem , of late , to expect ( 6 a certain number , whether good or bad , " how ...
... suppose the play would be popular ? Or when she allows also , that " incidents must be numerous , however unconnected , " to please a London audience , who seem , of late , to expect ( 6 a certain number , whether good or bad , " how ...
Page 118
... suppose himself to excel , and for which he has not displayed his utter incapacity . Yet after more than forty years of mortifi- cation and disappointment ; after seeing the dearest pledges of his literary labour glide successively to ...
... suppose himself to excel , and for which he has not displayed his utter incapacity . Yet after more than forty years of mortifi- cation and disappointment ; after seeing the dearest pledges of his literary labour glide successively to ...
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