Works: With an Essay on His Life and Genius, Band 12Thomas Tegg and others, 1824 |
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Seite 148
... hope , for the honour of so great a man , that it is without founda- tion ; and that he , whom no series of success could ever betray to vanity or negligence , could have supported a change of fortune without im- patience or dejection ...
... hope , for the honour of so great a man , that it is without founda- tion ; and that he , whom no series of success could ever betray to vanity or negligence , could have supported a change of fortune without im- patience or dejection ...
Seite 178
... hope of ever- lasting salvation from the revealed promises of God , and his confidence in the merits of our Re- deemer , of the sincerity of which declaration his whole behaviour in his long illness was an incon- testable 178 BURMAN .
... hope of ever- lasting salvation from the revealed promises of God , and his confidence in the merits of our Re- deemer , of the sincerity of which declaration his whole behaviour in his long illness was an incon- testable 178 BURMAN .
Seite 188
... hope of a perfect cure , but which , if he has not been able by his precepts to instruct us to remove , he has , at least , by his example , taught us to bear ; for he never betrayed any indecent impatience , or unmanly dejection ...
... hope of a perfect cure , but which , if he has not been able by his precepts to instruct us to remove , he has , at least , by his example , taught us to bear ; for he never betrayed any indecent impatience , or unmanly dejection ...
Seite 212
... hope of a literary education , to seek some other means of gaining a livelihood . He was first placed with a collector of the ex- cise . He used to recount with some pleasure a journey or two which he rode with him as his clerk , and ...
... hope of a literary education , to seek some other means of gaining a livelihood . He was first placed with a collector of the ex- cise . He used to recount with some pleasure a journey or two which he rode with him as his clerk , and ...
Seite 235
... hope from other en- gagements . " Of his offers of alliances with Russia and the maritime powers , she observed , that it could be never fit to alienate her dominions for the consolidation of an alliance formed only to keep them entire ...
... hope from other en- gagements . " Of his offers of alliances with Russia and the maritime powers , she observed , that it could be never fit to alienate her dominions for the consolidation of an alliance formed only to keep them entire ...
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afterwards appeared Ascham Ashbourne Austrians Blake boat Boerhaave Bohemia Boswell Browne Cheynel coast continued court danger DEAR MADAM DEAREST MADAM death declared degree desire diligence discovered domestick dominions Drake Dutch Earse easily EDWARD CAVE elector of Saxony endeavoured enemies engaged English equally expected father fleet French friends happiness harbour honour hope imagine inquiries island kind king of Prussia knowledge labour lady land learning letter Lichfield lived Lord Macleod master ment mind nature never night Nombre de Dios observations opinion passed perhaps physick pinnaces pleasure prince prince Charles procured promises publick queen of Hungary Raarsa reason received Religio Medici reputation retired rock sail seems sent ships Silesia Sir Thomas Browne Skie soon Spaniards Streatham suffered suppose Symerons things thought Thrale tion town travelled troops vessels write