The Bee, Or Literary Intelligencer, Zväzok 8James Anderson Mundell and Son, Parliament Stairs, 1792 |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 5 z 39.
Strana 21
... island of Great Britain in point of value per fleece : As to carcase , I shall reserve giving my opinion till I have an answer to the following questions from Mr Sherif , or whoever published the above account . 1. What was the fheep ...
... island of Great Britain in point of value per fleece : As to carcase , I shall reserve giving my opinion till I have an answer to the following questions from Mr Sherif , or whoever published the above account . 1. What was the fheep ...
Strana 28
... island . His family consisted of a wife and three young children . He pofsefsed a number of slaves , whose looks and whole appearence betokened that their servitude was not grievous . Indeed Wilmot was one of those benevolent characters ...
... island . His family consisted of a wife and three young children . He pofsefsed a number of slaves , whose looks and whole appearence betokened that their servitude was not grievous . Indeed Wilmot was one of those benevolent characters ...
Strana 54
... island , about half a mile long , lying off the S. E. end of is country . This castle stands about twenty yards from the sea , and seems to be of a different kind from any others in the country , there being no ditches round it ; but I ...
... island , about half a mile long , lying off the S. E. end of is country . This castle stands about twenty yards from the sea , and seems to be of a different kind from any others in the country , there being no ditches round it ; but I ...
Strana 95
... island , where no Englishman ever could have had an oppor- tunity of seeing them . Hence it is not at all probable that they could have formed an idea of imitating them . From this circumstance we may naturally infer , In the second ...
... island , where no Englishman ever could have had an oppor- tunity of seeing them . Hence it is not at all probable that they could have formed an idea of imitating them . From this circumstance we may naturally infer , In the second ...
Strana 109
... island ; he told me that these negroes sometimes went on board English fhips , to make depredations on the Spanish islands ; he made me understand , that in one of those cruises , Ellaroe and her father might be rescued . He awakened in ...
... island ; he told me that these negroes sometimes went on board English fhips , to make depredations on the Spanish islands ; he made me understand , that in one of those cruises , Ellaroe and her father might be rescued . He awakened in ...
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Časté výrazy a frázy
appear April April 18 beautiful Bow wow wow Britain businefs captain Chicory circumstances coast cocoon commodore constitution of France continued Correspondence in French court dhunes discovered duke Editor Ellaroe emperor employed Europe expence exprefsion eyes faſhion favour fhall fhips fhort fhould fiſh France George Pocock give harbour heart honour hope hundred impofsible island John Bernoulli kind king king of Sweden land late lefs leſs letters Loch Bracadale Loda lofs Macleod manner means ment mind nation nature necefsary neral never observations Ofsian pafsion persons plant pofsefsed pofsible pounds present prince publiſhed readers reared reason received respect Rib grafs salt Scotland seeds ſhall ſhe ſhip silk silk-worm soon Spain Spaniſh spirit ther thing thou thousand tion Tobermory vefsel verses viii whole worm young Zimeo
Populárne pasáže
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Strana 148 - Hail wedded love! mysterious law, true source Of human offspring, sole propriety In Paradise of all things common else. By thee adulterous lust was driv'n from men Among the bestial herds to range; by thee Founded in reason, loyal, just, and pure, Relations dear, and all the charities Of father, son, and brother, first were known.
Strana 322 - The two fields next to me, from the first of which I have walled — no, no— paled in about as much as my garden consisted of before, so that the walk runs round the hedge, where you may figure me walking any time of the day, and sometimes of the night.
Strana 257 - In the loose rhymes of every poetaster :— Could I be more than any man that lives, Great, fair, rich, wise, all in superlatives : Yet I more freely would these gifts resign, Than ever Fortune would have made them mine; And hold one minute of this holy leisure, Beyond the riches of this empty pleasure.
Strana 324 - Now that I am prating of myself, know that, after fourteen or fifteen years, the ' Castle of Indolence.
Strana 117 - Friend, you and I serve the two greatest masters existing, but in different callings ; you beat up for volunteers for King George, I for the Lord Jesus. In God's name, then, let us not interrupt each other; the world is wide enough for both ; and we may get recruits in abundance.
Strana 165 - Indies, belonging to a private company, whose existence had been deemed prejudicial to the commonwealth. What then were the fruits which Britain reaped from this long and desperate war ? A dreadful expense of blood and treasure '', disgrace upon disgrace, an additional load of grievous impositions, and the national debt accumulated to the enormous sum of eighty millions sterling.
Strana 325 - All our friends are pretty much in statu quo, except it be poor Mr. Lyttelton. He has had the severest trial a human tender heart can have ;{ but the old physician, time, will at last close up his wounds, though there must always remain an inward smarting.