The Gentleman's Magazine, Band 6E. Cave, jun. at St John's Gate, 1736 The "Gentleman's magazine" section is a digest of selections from the weekly press; the "(Trader's) monthly intelligencer" section consists of news (foreign and domestic), vital statistics, a register of the month's new publications, and a calendar of forthcoming trade fairs. |
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Seite 24
... Friend , inftead of anfwering , left me ; which made me reflect , that if indeed Whiggifm meant no more than a ... Friends , and de- feats the Schemes of the Adverfary . Ay ! but we are told , there is a kind of am- phibious Creature , a ...
... Friend , inftead of anfwering , left me ; which made me reflect , that if indeed Whiggifm meant no more than a ... Friends , and de- feats the Schemes of the Adverfary . Ay ! but we are told , there is a kind of am- phibious Creature , a ...
Seite 30
... Friend having refided fome Time at a very confiderable Court in Germany contracted an Intimacy with a German Prince , whofe Dominions and Revenues were as fmall as his Birth was great and illuftrious ; this Prince made him Pro- B mife ...
... Friend having refided fome Time at a very confiderable Court in Germany contracted an Intimacy with a German Prince , whofe Dominions and Revenues were as fmall as his Birth was great and illuftrious ; this Prince made him Pro- B mife ...
Seite 42
... Friends , will , we doubt not , prevail intirely to put an end to the pre . fent Troubles . Your Majefty's tender Care of ... Friend , that Part of the Propofal for a preffing our Concern , upon being acquainted Gold Medal offer'd in our ...
... Friends , will , we doubt not , prevail intirely to put an end to the pre . fent Troubles . Your Majefty's tender Care of ... Friend , that Part of the Propofal for a preffing our Concern , upon being acquainted Gold Medal offer'd in our ...
Seite 49
... friend is fure as dear a name as bride ! ) Your equal grief , your equal art to charm Might Pluto's breaft with the fame pity warm . Hafte then , with your harmonious lyre , defcend ; And charm back from the fhades our common But no ...
... friend is fure as dear a name as bride ! ) Your equal grief , your equal art to charm Might Pluto's breaft with the fame pity warm . Hafte then , with your harmonious lyre , defcend ; And charm back from the fhades our common But no ...
Seite 51
... friend . D Henceforth , thro ? you , how will the 20 , But when my family they know , fad cafe ! They fhew their ... friends , nor bluth , nor be afraid To own the truth - had you no third man's aid ? Speak out , like men -- to make the ...
... friend . D Henceforth , thro ? you , how will the 20 , But when my family they know , fad cafe ! They fhew their ... friends , nor bluth , nor be afraid To own the truth - had you no third man's aid ? Speak out , like men -- to make the ...
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affert againſt alfo Anfwer becauſe Cafe call'd Caufe Chriftian Church Church of England Clergy Confequence confiderable Conftitution Crown D'Anvers Defign defire Diffenters Ditto England Epigram Expence faid fame feems fent ferve feveral fhall fhew fhould fince fire firft fome foon Friend ftand ftill fuch fufficient fuppofe fupport fure Gentleman give hath himſelf Honour Houfe Inftance Intereft John juft Juftice King Lady laft late leaft lefs Liberty Lord Majefty Majefty's ment Mifs Minifters moft moſt muft muſt Nature neceffary never Number obferve Occafion pafs Parliament Peace Perfons pleafed Pleaſure Power prefent preferve Prince Princess of Wales propofed Proteftant publick Quakers Reafon Refpect Religion Royal Ruffia Senfe St John's Gate SYLVANUS URBAN Teft thee thefe themfelves theſe Thing thofe thoſe thou thought thro tion Tranflation Whig whofe wife worfe wou'd
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 169 - For Christ is not entered into the holy places made with hands, which are the figures of the true; but into heaven itself, now to appear in the presence of God for us...
Seite 173 - For it seemed good to the Holy Ghost, and to us, to lay upon you no greater burden than these necessary things, " that ye abstain from meats offered to idols, and from blood, and from things strangled, and from fornication, from which if ye keep yourselves, ye shall do well. Fare ye well.
Seite 280 - Attending each with stately pace, lulus' side, as erst Evander's *, To keep off flatterers, spies and panders, To let no noble slave come near And scare lord Fannys from his ear: Then might a royal youth, and true, Enjoy at least a friend — or two ; A treasure which, of royal kind, Few but himself deserve to find. Then Bounce ('tis all that Bounce can crave) Shall wag her tail within the grave. And...
Seite 280 - One ushers Friends to Bathurst's Door; One fawns, at Oxford's, on the Poor. Nobles, whom Arms or Arts adorn, Wait for my Infants yet unborn. None but a Peer of Wit and Grace, Can hope a Puppy of my Race. And O! wou'd Fate the Bliss decree To mine (a Bliss too great for me) That two, my tallest Sons, might grace Attending each with stately Pace, lulus...
Seite 123 - Godhead, and at the same time to shew, that, as he is present to every thing, he cannot but be attentive to every thing, and privy to all the modes and parts of its existence : or, in other words, that his omniscience and omnipresence are coexistent, and run together through the whole infinitude of space.
Seite 127 - If it affirms anything, you cannot lay hold of it ; or if it denies, you cannot confute it. In a word, there are greater depths and obscurities, greater intricacies and perplexities, in an elaborate and wellwritten piece of nonsense, than in the most abstruse and profound tract of school divinity.
Seite 280 - Yet master Pope, whom Truth and Sense Shall call their friend some ages hence, Though now on loftier themes he sings, Than to bestow a word on kings, Has sworn by Styx, the poet's oath, And dread of dogs and poets both, " Man and his works he'll soon renounce. And roar in numbers worthy Bounce.
Seite 128 - Ghibelins had to support each other against the first assaults of sense and reason ; and brought nonsense so far into fashion, that they who knew better would speak it by way of triumph over those who went upon the rules of logic. Wrong fellows were his orators ; but this could not do only without persons who were as much masters of that kind of nonsense which my author calls "nonsense to the conscience.
Seite 519 - September next to come, to the Grassmarket of Edinburgh, the common place of execution of the said burgh, betwixt the hours of two and four of the clock of the afternoon of the said day, and there to be hanged by the neck upon a gibbet, by the hands of the executioner, until he be dead ; and ordained all his moveable goods and gear to be escheat and inbrought to his Majesty's use, which was pronounced for doom.
Seite 123 - ... and enliven all the powers of man. How happy therefore is an intellectual being, who, by prayer and meditation, by virtue and good works, opens this communication between God and his own soul...