Buckley * has shed as much blood as the former ; but I cannot forbear saying (and I hope it will not look like envy) that we regard our brother Buckley as a kind of Drawcansir, who spares neither friend nor foe ; but generally kills as many of his own... The British Essayists: The Tatler - Página 117de Alexander Chalmers - 1803Visualização completa - Sobre este livro
| 1831 - 704 páginas
...confessed, the redoubted Mr. Bucklcyt has shed as much blood as the former ; but I cannot forbear saying (and I hope it will not look like envy) that we regard our brollier Buckley as a kind of Drawcansir, who spares neither friend nor foe ; but generally kills as... | |
| Joseph Addison - 1853 - 902 páginas
...confessed, the redoubted Mr. Buckley * has shed as much blood as the former ; but I cannot forbear saying (and I hope it will not look like envy) that we regard...but generally kills as many of his own side as the enemy's. It is impossible for this ingenious sort of men to subsist after a peace : every one remembers... | |
| Joseph Addison - 1856 - 536 páginas
...confessed, the redoubted Mr. Buckley * has shed as much blood as the former ; but I cannot forbear saying (and I hope it will not look like envy) that we regard...but generally kills as many of his own side as the enemy's. It is impossible for this ingenious sort of men to subsist after a peace : every one remembers... | |
| Joseph Addison - 1856 - 484 páginas
...confessed, the redoubted Mr. Buckley has shed as much blood as the former ; but I cannot forbear saying (and I hope it will not look like envy) that we regard...but generally kills as many of his own side as the enemy's. It is impossible for this ingenious sort of men to subsist after a peace : every one remembers... | |
| Joseph Addison - 1856 - 480 páginas
...confessed, the redoubted Mr. Buckley has shed as much blood as the former ; but I cannot forbear saying (and I hope it will not look like envy) that we regard...but generally kills as many of his own side as the enemy's. It is impossible for this ingenious sort of men to subsist after a peace : every one remembers... | |
| Sir Richard Steele, Joseph Addison - 1861 - 368 páginas
...to repair. It must be confessed, the redoubted Mr. Buckley has shed as much blood as the former. ... It is impossible for this ingenious sort of men to subsist after a peace — e«cry one remembers the shifts they were driven to in the reign of King Charles II., where tliey... | |
| Charles Knight - 1865 - 366 páginas
...confessed the redoubted Mr. Buckley has shed as much blood as the former; but I cannot forbear saying (and I hope it will not look like envy) that we regard...but generally kills as many of his own side as the enemy's. It is impossible for this ingenious sort of men to subsist after a peace. Every one remembers... | |
| Charles Knight - 1865 - 344 páginas
...Drawcansir, who spares neither friend nor foe, but generally kills as many of his own side as the enemy's. It is impossible for this ingenious sort of men to...shifts they were driven to in the reign of King Charles II., when they could not furnish out a single paper of news without lighting up a comet in Germany,... | |
| Joseph Addison - 1870 - 524 páginas
...confessed, the redoubted Mr. Buckley a has shed as much blood as the former ; but I cannot forbear saying (and I hope it will not look like envy) that we regard...but generally kills as many of his own side as the enemy's. It is impossible for this ingenious sort of men to subsist after a peace : every one remembers... | |
| 1871 - 930 páginas
...redoubted Mr. Buckley [another editor] has shed as much blood as the former ; but I cannot forbear saying (and I hope it will not look like envy) that we regard...remembers the shifts they were driven to in the reign of Charles II., when they could not furnish out a single paper of news, without lighting up a comet in... | |
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