The Edinburgh Magazine, Or, Literary Miscellany, Band 8;Band 10J. Sibbald, Parliament-Square, 1797 |
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Seite 1
... Bill , 76 Defcription of Mount Etna , - 40 Births , Marriages , and Deaths , 77 A State General Court Martial at Air , Trial of Thomas Potts before the High Court of Justiciary , · State of the BAROMETER in inches and decimals , and.
... Bill , 76 Defcription of Mount Etna , - 40 Births , Marriages , and Deaths , 77 A State General Court Martial at Air , Trial of Thomas Potts before the High Court of Justiciary , · State of the BAROMETER in inches and decimals , and.
Seite 61
... Bill . HIS Bill being recommitted to a Committee of the whole Houfe , the Chancellor of the Exchequer moved for the introduction of a claufe , to make Bank notes a legal payment to the Col- lectors in every department of the pub- lic ...
... Bill . HIS Bill being recommitted to a Committee of the whole Houfe , the Chancellor of the Exchequer moved for the introduction of a claufe , to make Bank notes a legal payment to the Col- lectors in every department of the pub- lic ...
Seite 62
... bills to the amount of 600,00al . 2 The clause , thus amended , was paffed , and ordered to be added to the Bill . March 31. Mr Sheridan said , that as he had put off the motion he had inten- ded to make this day with regard to any ...
... bills to the amount of 600,00al . 2 The clause , thus amended , was paffed , and ordered to be added to the Bill . March 31. Mr Sheridan said , that as he had put off the motion he had inten- ded to make this day with regard to any ...
Seite 63
... Bill . The order of the day being moved for the third reading of this Bill , Mr Pitt moved , that it now be read a third time . Mr Wilberforce Bird prefented a claufe for the purpofe of preventing diftrefs for rent after tender of the ...
... Bill . The order of the day being moved for the third reading of this Bill , Mr Pitt moved , that it now be read a third time . Mr Wilberforce Bird prefented a claufe for the purpofe of preventing diftrefs for rent after tender of the ...
Seite 64
... Bills ; and the fum of 2,177,000l . to make good charges on the Confolidated Fund . Various other fums were alfo moved for and voted . 900,000 that he should bring forward a propofi- tion to. demand . He concluded by moving , that the Bill ...
... Bills ; and the fum of 2,177,000l . to make good charges on the Confolidated Fund . Various other fums were alfo moved for and voted . 900,000 that he should bring forward a propofi- tion to. demand . He concluded by moving , that the Bill ...
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Beliebte Passagen
Seite 435 - It cannot be denied, but that he who is made judge to sit upon the birth or death of books, whether they may be wafted into this world or not, had need to be a man above the common measure, both studious, learned and judicious...
Seite 121 - This power, which Rubens possessed in the highest degree, enabled him to represent whatever he undertook better than any other painter. His animals, particularly lions and horses, are so admirable, that it may be said they were never properly represented but by him. His portraits rank with the best works of the painters who have made that branch of the art the sole business of their lives; and of those he has left a great variety of specimens.
Seite 128 - Though equal to all things, for all things unfit; Too nice for a statesman, too proud for a wit; For a patriot, too cool; for a drudge, disobedient; And too fond of the right to pursue the expedient. In short, 'twas his fate, unemploy'd or in place, sir, To eat mutton cold, and cut blocks with a razor.
Seite 121 - ... the same may be said of his young men and children : his old men have that sort of dignity which a bushy beard will confer; but he never possessed a poetical conception of character.
Seite 120 - ... every thing they did was the effect of great labour and pains. The productions of Rubens, on the contrary, seem to flow with a freedom and prodigality, as if they cost him nothing ; and to the general animation of the composition there is always a correspondent spirit in the execution of the work.
Seite 120 - ... enthusiasm with which the painter was carried away. To this we may add the complete uniformity in all the parts of the work, so that...
Seite 212 - They feem to have held that diverfity, nay univerfality, of excellence, at which the moderns frequently aim, to be a gift unattainable by man. We therefore of Great Britain have perhaps more...
Seite 121 - He appears to have entertained a great abhorrence of the meagre dry manner of his predecessors, the old German and Flemish Painters; to avoid which, he kept his outline large and flowing: this, carried to an extreme, produced that heaviness which is so frequently found in his figures.
Seite 359 - The eye that mocketh at his father, and defpifeth to obey his mother, the ravens of the valley fhall pick it out, and the young eagles fhall eat it."* ' Are we not taught by the law of nature as well as that of chrif* Eph.
Seite 382 - Thy patience, by no wrongs subdued, Thy gay good-humour — can they " fade ?" " Perhaps— but sorrow dims my eye : Cold turf, which I no more must view, Dear name, which I no more must sigh, A long, a last, a sad adieu...