The Monthly Review, Or, Literary JournalR. Griffiths, 1818 - Books |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 88
Page 144
... English king can never safely set himself above the restraints of law or the controul of parliament . An English monarch is most truly great when he keeps within those limits which the constitution prescribes for the exercise of his ...
... English king can never safely set himself above the restraints of law or the controul of parliament . An English monarch is most truly great when he keeps within those limits which the constitution prescribes for the exercise of his ...
Page 146
... English liberty , and a stronger attachment to that venerable fabric in which it has been so long enshrined . We do not know of any work in the English language in which so much constitutional in- formation has been condensed . Mr. H.'s ...
... English liberty , and a stronger attachment to that venerable fabric in which it has been so long enshrined . We do not know of any work in the English language in which so much constitutional in- formation has been condensed . Mr. H.'s ...
Page 385
... English or American , the low deep - roofed Cana- dian house gives place to the English farm - house , or Yankee fir - boarded mansion . Instead of churches we have taverns ; gaols and assembly - rooms for convents , and a half - sulky ...
... English or American , the low deep - roofed Cana- dian house gives place to the English farm - house , or Yankee fir - boarded mansion . Instead of churches we have taverns ; gaols and assembly - rooms for convents , and a half - sulky ...
Contents
OF | 1 |
Sermons collective See Skurray | 5 |
Elegy on the Death of Richard Rey | 13 |
33 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
acre affection antient appears Avonmore body Buda caravanserais Caswallon Celts character Charlemagne Christian church circumstances consequence considerable considered Constantinople contains Curran Danube disease Ditto ditto double refraction Edward Chappell Elizabeth England English established Europe exhibited experiments favour feel former France French give given Greece honour important inch Indians inhabitants instance interest Jesuits King Kitros knowlege labour land language latter less liberty Lord Lord Byron manner marriage means Memoirs ment mind moral Morocco nature never object observations occasion opinion original particular passage passed peculiar pendulum perhaps Pernambuco persons phthisis population possession present principles produced Queen racter readers reign remarks respect says scarcely seems shew society species specimen style supposed thing tion town traveller Tripoli typhus volume Vortigern Walachia whole writer