The Edinburgh Review: Or Critical Journal, Volum 143A. Constable, 1876 |
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Pàgina
... Bishop of St. David's . London : 1842 to 1872 , . · II . - 1 . Passages in the Life of Mrs. Margaret Maitland of Sunnyside . Written by herself . 1850 . 2. Merkland : a Story of Scottish Life . By the Author of Passages in the Life of ...
... Bishop of St. David's . London : 1842 to 1872 , . · II . - 1 . Passages in the Life of Mrs. Margaret Maitland of Sunnyside . Written by herself . 1850 . 2. Merkland : a Story of Scottish Life . By the Author of Passages in the Life of ...
Pàgina 106
... bishop was lord - keeper while the marriage negotiations were at their height . ' It is really hard to believe that the writer of these lines can have read Mr. Gardiner's book . It is true there was an anti- Spanish party in James ...
... bishop was lord - keeper while the marriage negotiations were at their height . ' It is really hard to believe that the writer of these lines can have read Mr. Gardiner's book . It is true there was an anti- Spanish party in James ...
Pàgina 111
... Bishop Hall . Pym even less than Eliot was a devotee to any particular form of faith . If he desired to put penal laws in force against Catholics or to silence the mouths of Arminians , it was not because he was thinking of the welfare ...
... Bishop Hall . Pym even less than Eliot was a devotee to any particular form of faith . If he desired to put penal laws in force against Catholics or to silence the mouths of Arminians , it was not because he was thinking of the welfare ...
Pàgina 112
... Bishop of Ely ; she rated Whitgift for allow- ing the Lambeth Articles to be drawn up without her know- ledge or consent . Such a galling dependence the Bishops pre- ferred to bear rather than submit to the interference of statute law ...
... Bishop of Ely ; she rated Whitgift for allow- ing the Lambeth Articles to be drawn up without her know- ledge or consent . Such a galling dependence the Bishops pre- ferred to bear rather than submit to the interference of statute law ...
Pàgina 113
... bishop , Sir Francis Knollys , the Privy Councillor , ac- cused the preacher of asserting by inference that bishops exer- cised authority jure divino , and of thereby denying the royal supremacy . Elizabeth had not been dead many years ...
... bishop , Sir Francis Knollys , the Privy Councillor , ac- cused the preacher of asserting by inference that bishops exer- cised authority jure divino , and of thereby denying the royal supremacy . Elizabeth had not been dead many years ...
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army authority Bishop British burgh called Canal Capponi carriages Casaubon cause cent century character charge Church common Company Connop Thirlwall cost Council course CXLIII doubt duties Edinburgh England English existence expression fact father favour feeling Florence Florentine French Ghibelline Gino Capponi Government grammar Greek hand honour House Iceland India influence interest John Strachey Jokull Khedive King labour language less literary living Lord Albemarle Lord Lawrence Lord Macaulay Lord Mayo Macaulay Marquis matter means ment miles military mind modern Mývatn nature never Oleron parish Parliament party passed passenger perhaps Petition of Right political popular present principles question railway regard result schools Scotch Scotland Scottish seems ships spirit Thirlwall thought tion Tonnage and Poundage trade truth United Kingdom Viceroy Whig words writing
Passatges populars
Pàgina 172 - But here is the finger of God, a flash of the will that can, Existent behind all laws, that made them, and lo, they are ! And I know not if, save in this, such gift be allowed to man, That out of three sounds he frame, not a fourth sound, but a
Pàgina 172 - Consider it well ; each tone of our scale in itself is nought ; It is everywhere in the world—loud, soft, and all is said : Give it to me to use ! I mix it with two in my thought, And there ! ye have seen and heard ; consider and bow the
Pàgina 581 - who are the same in wealth and in " poverty, in glory and in obscurity." Great as were the honours and possessions which Macaulay acquired by his pen, all who knew him were well aware that the titles and rewards, which he gained by his own works, were as nothing in the
Pàgina 127 - that no man hereafter be compelled to make or yield any gift, loan, benevolence, tax, or such like charge, without common consent by Act of Parliament.
Pàgina 581 - except himself to speak. He has told us how his debt to them was incalculable ; how they guided him to truth; how they filled his mind with noble and graceful images; how they stood by him in all vicissitudes,—comforters in sorrow, nurses in sickness, companions in solitude, " the old friends who are
Pàgina 438 - no goods or commodities whatever, of the growth, production, or manufacture of Asia, Africa, or America, should be imported either into England or Ireland or any of the plantations of Great Britain, except in Britishbuilt ships, owned by British subjects, and of which the master and three-fourths of the crew belonged to that country
Pàgina 568 - But he saw on Palatinus The white porch of his home, And he spake to the noble river That rolls by the walls of
Pàgina 569 - materially depends upon the temper in which the search for it is instituted and conducted." ' How much this letter pleased Macaulay is indicated by the fact of his having kept it unburned : a compliment which, except in this single instance, he never paid to any of his correspondents.
Pàgina 580 - History will have been printed and sold in the United Kingdom alone.' Caring little for money, except in so far as he was able to make a liberal and generous use of it, Macaulay enjoyed the power his new opulence had conferred on him. Until he was fifty-two years of age, he had never had a
Pàgina 497 - was thrown out of gear. The scarcity of hands made it difficult for the minor tenants to perform the services due for their lands, and only a temporary abandonment of half the rent by the landowners induced the farmers to refrain from the abandonment of their farms.