The Monthly review. New and improved ser, Volume 131794 |
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Page 14
... subject ; we shall therefore copy two of his examples without any ani madverfions of our own : " IX . 1. diw ligo 2. dna ΔΕΩ invenio AHN 3. δέω egco ΔΕΡΩ 4. δεύω rigo 5. δύω fuites ΔΕΥΩ ΑΥΓΩ The forms and flexions of thefe verbs are ...
... subject ; we shall therefore copy two of his examples without any ani madverfions of our own : " IX . 1. diw ligo 2. dna ΔΕΩ invenio AHN 3. δέω egco ΔΕΡΩ 4. δεύω rigo 5. δύω fuites ΔΕΥΩ ΑΥΓΩ The forms and flexions of thefe verbs are ...
Page 27
... newly - difcovered species are reprefented on three very neat and decently crowded plates : fomewhat in the manner of Dillenius . Do ART . 5 / ART . IX . Sermons on various Subjects , published Dickson - Fafciculus tertius , & c . 27.
... newly - difcovered species are reprefented on three very neat and decently crowded plates : fomewhat in the manner of Dillenius . Do ART . 5 / ART . IX . Sermons on various Subjects , published Dickson - Fafciculus tertius , & c . 27.
Page 28
ART . IX . Sermons on various Subjects , published at the Reque ft of the Congregation of Proteftant Diffenters in Wakefield . By William Turner . 8vo . pp . 454. 6s . Boards . Johnson . 1793 . PERHAPS the reafon why the fermons of the ...
ART . IX . Sermons on various Subjects , published at the Reque ft of the Congregation of Proteftant Diffenters in Wakefield . By William Turner . 8vo . pp . 454. 6s . Boards . Johnson . 1793 . PERHAPS the reafon why the fermons of the ...
Page 29
... Subjects , the Merit of Mr. Thomas Barker , the celebrated young Painter of Bath , is particularly confidered , and his Pictures re- viewed . By the Author of an Excurfion from Paris to Fontain- bleau . 8vo . pp . 390. 6s . Boards ...
... Subjects , the Merit of Mr. Thomas Barker , the celebrated young Painter of Bath , is particularly confidered , and his Pictures re- viewed . By the Author of an Excurfion from Paris to Fontain- bleau . 8vo . pp . 390. 6s . Boards ...
Page 52
... subject , have doubts , and rational doubts , on this question . One fact feems indifputable : -that , in fome other animal poifons , no conftitutional effects come on without a local impreffion . Where is an inftance of the occurrence ...
... subject , have doubts , and rational doubts , on this question . One fact feems indifputable : -that , in fome other animal poifons , no conftitutional effects come on without a local impreffion . Where is an inftance of the occurrence ...
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Popular passages
Page 261 - Put out the light, and then put out the light. If I quench thee, thou flaming minister, I can again thy former light restore, Should I repent me; but once put out thy light, Thou cunning'st pattern of excelling nature, I know not where is that Promethean heat That can thy light relume.
Page 260 - What hands are here ? ha ! they pluck out mine eyes. Will all great Neptune's ocean wash this blood Clean from my hand ? No, this my hand will rather The multitudinous seas incarnadine, Making the green one red.
Page 267 - I fed on the smiles of my dear? They tell me, my favourite maid, The pride of that valley, is flown; Alas ! where with her I have stray'd, I could wander with pleasure, alone.
Page 351 - That the Supreme Court shall have exclusive jurisdiction of all controversies of a civil nature, where a state is a party, except between a state and its citizens; and except also between a state and citizens of other states, or aliens, in which latter case it shall have original but not exclusive jurisdiction.
Page 124 - J came up to the opening, where the wood was fo thick, that I had neither room to turn my horfe round, nor to get on one fide. I was therefore obliged to abandon him to his fate, and take refuge in a tolerably high tree, up which I climbed.
Page 570 - LAILI'S frantick lover lives in song. Not he, who reasons best, this wisdom knows : Ears only drink what rapt'rous tongues disclose. Nor fruitless deem the reed's heart-piercing pain : See sweetness dropping from the parted cane. Alternate hope and fear my days divide: I courted Grief, and Anguish was my bride. Flow on, sad stream of life!
Page 465 - Treasury is concerned, would be like taking money out of one pocket and putting it in the other.
Page 150 - The heads of a fpeech to the fame purpofe by Mr. Sydenham are added ; and the author relates the refult of the motion, that the queftion, in a houfe of 263 members, was negatived by a majority of 32 voices only. He adds, * No attempt at parliamentary reform, in any...
Page 263 - You wait on nature's mifchief! Come, thick night, And pall thee in the dunneft fmoke of hell ! That my keen knife fee not the wound it makes ; Nor heaven peep through the blanket of the dark, To cry, Hold, hold!
Page 570 - With me, from native banks untimely torn, Love-warbling youths and soft-ey'd virgins mourn. O ! let the heart, by fatal absence rent, Feel what I sing, and bleed when I lament: Who roams in exile from his parent bow'r, Pants to return, and chides each ling'ring hour.