The Monthly Review, Or, Literary JournalR. Griffiths, 1819 - Books |
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Page 219
... England till the twelfth century , and then only by violent usurpation ; -that Popery was therefore an intruder upon the Church of England , and not the Church of England upon Popery ; and that the Reformation of the Church of England ...
... England till the twelfth century , and then only by violent usurpation ; -that Popery was therefore an intruder upon the Church of England , and not the Church of England upon Popery ; and that the Reformation of the Church of England ...
Page 281
... England ; by which means trade would decay , the people be oppressed , and the nobility and great men become altogether corrupted . ' These remarks apply to the partial union effected by the accession of James I. to the crown of England ...
... England ; by which means trade would decay , the people be oppressed , and the nobility and great men become altogether corrupted . ' These remarks apply to the partial union effected by the accession of James I. to the crown of England ...
Page 401
... England displays in the fifteenth century a still more mortifying contrast with Italy . Italy , too , had her religious schisms and public distractions ; but her arts and literature had always a sheltering - place . They were even ...
... England displays in the fifteenth century a still more mortifying contrast with Italy . Italy , too , had her religious schisms and public distractions ; but her arts and literature had always a sheltering - place . They were even ...
Contents
Fall of the Leaf | 14 |
Flamanville Madame de Eugenia | 25 |
43 | 26 |
Copyright | |
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