English Prose of the Eighteenth CenturyCecil Albert Moore |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 86
Page 34
... employ- ment of our poor is by setting them to work on the several manufactures be- fore mentioned , as spinning , weaving , and manufacturing our English wool . All our workhouses lately erected in England are in general thus employed ...
... employ- ment of our poor is by setting them to work on the several manufactures be- fore mentioned , as spinning , weaving , and manufacturing our English wool . All our workhouses lately erected in England are in general thus employed ...
Page 36
... employed , and numbers of inn - holders , victuallers , and their dependencies sub- sisted . And on this account I cannot but ob- serve to your honours , and ' tis well worth your consideration , that the already trans- posing a vast ...
... employed , and numbers of inn - holders , victuallers , and their dependencies sub- sisted . And on this account I cannot but ob- serve to your honours , and ' tis well worth your consideration , that the already trans- posing a vast ...
Page 37
... employed in that city . These are the effects of transposing manufactures and interrupting the cir- culation of trade . All methods to bring our trade to be managed by fewer hands than it was before are in themselves pernicious to ...
... employed in that city . These are the effects of transposing manufactures and interrupting the cir- culation of trade . All methods to bring our trade to be managed by fewer hands than it was before are in themselves pernicious to ...
Contents
PREFACE | 4 |
THE POOR MANS PLEA | 14 |
THE SHORTEST WAY WITH THE DISSENTERS | 23 |
Copyright | |
37 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
able Addison admiration Æneid affection appear atheism Bargrave beauty better body called cerned character Church Church of England Cicero common consider creature death desire discourse endeavour enemy England English entertainment eral fear fortune freethinkers genius gentleman give hand hath honour horse House of Hanover Houyhnhnms Hudibras human humour Iliad Isaac Bickerstaff Juvenal kind King lady learning least live look Lord mankind manner master means ment mind moral nation nature ness never noble observed occasion opinion passion persons pleased pleasure poet poor pretend prince reader reason religion Richard Steele ridicule sense servants Sir Roger Steele taste Tatler tell temper Theocles things Thomas D'Urfey thought tion told Tom Jones town ture turn Veal vice Virgil virtue Whig whole word writing Yahoos young