The Scots Magazine, Band 15Sands, Brymer, Murray and Cochran, 1753 |
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Seite 41
... See , where an old acquaintance lies ! Another ! and another there ! This once , on earth , was counted wife , Facetious this , and this fincere ! This was good - natur'd to a fault , And this was charitably giv'n ; Alike they moulder ...
... See , where an old acquaintance lies ! Another ! and another there ! This once , on earth , was counted wife , Facetious this , and this fincere ! This was good - natur'd to a fault , And this was charitably giv'n ; Alike they moulder ...
Seite 90
... see more of this imperfection than we do ourselves . I fhall perhaps be told , that a man of fenfe can never ufe a woman ill . The lat- ter part of this propofition is a phrafe of very extenfive and various fignification . Whether a man ...
... see more of this imperfection than we do ourselves . I fhall perhaps be told , that a man of fenfe can never ufe a woman ill . The lat- ter part of this propofition is a phrafe of very extenfive and various fignification . Whether a man ...
Seite 109
... See § 16 . QUEST . II . Whether the faid Eng lifh privateers were warranted to stop , on the high feas , the Pruffian veffels , under the pretext , that there was mer- chandize on board them , that belonged R them into England , to ...
... See § 16 . QUEST . II . Whether the faid Eng lifh privateers were warranted to stop , on the high feas , the Pruffian veffels , under the pretext , that there was mer- chandize on board them , that belonged R them into England , to ...
Seite 112
... See 2 . A declaration which was afterwards more particularly repeated , and in the following terms , That there was not the leaft intention towards oppofing any obftacles to the commerce of the Pruf- fian fubjects , provided they ...
... See 2 . A declaration which was afterwards more particularly repeated , and in the following terms , That there was not the leaft intention towards oppofing any obftacles to the commerce of the Pruf- fian fubjects , provided they ...
Seite 116
... See § 52. 53 . $ 63 . The preceeding peace does not receive any attaint thereby ; fince , ac- cording to the laws of nations , the repa- ration of a new offence may be profecu- ted ( falva pace ) without interruption of a peace . 64 ...
... See § 52. 53 . $ 63 . The preceeding peace does not receive any attaint thereby ; fince , ac- cording to the laws of nations , the repa- ration of a new offence may be profecu- ted ( falva pace ) without interruption of a peace . 64 ...
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Beliebte Passagen
Seite 178 - Behold, the nations are as a drop of a bucket, and are counted as the small dust of the balance : behold, He taketh up the isles as a very little thing.
Seite 221 - It is ordered and adjudged by the lords spiritual and temporal in parliament assembled, that the said petition and appeal be, and is hereby, dismissed this House ; and that the said interlocutor therein complained of be, and the same is hereby, affirmed.
Seite 567 - The Age of Authors ; for, perhaps, there never was a time, in which men of all degrees of ability, of every kind of education, of every profession and employment, were posting with ardour so general to the press.
Seite 112 - Before the ship or goods can be disposed of by the captor, there must be a regular judicial proceeding, wherein both parties may be heard, and condemnation thereupon as prize, in a court of admiralty, judging by the law of nations and treaties. " The proper and regular court for these condemnations is the court of that state to whom the captor belongs.
Seite 499 - ... another could have been told to continue their entertainment. Such was the benevolence of pity ! But a lady who had taken the opportunity of a very...
Seite 393 - ... from each other by nature or by fortune. The duke of Mantua...
Seite 65 - The happiest in the world, madam (returned the thread-woman) ; he is wonderfully fond of children, and to his great joy his lady is now lying-in of her first child, which is to be christened this evening; and as fine a boy, they say it is, as ever was seen.
Seite 131 - ... of Woman had not driven her from his roof. From this time the Nymph has led a wandering life, without any settled habitation.
Seite 131 - He endowed him with all the graces of mind and body; and at an age when the soul becomes sensible of desires, he breathed into him a passion for the beautiful Felicia.
Seite 69 - Sir: — It is well known to all who are conversant in electrical experiments, that the electric power may be propagated along a small wire, from one place to another, without being sensibly abated by the length of its progress. Let, then, a set of wires, equal in number to the letters of the alphabet, be extended horizontally between two given places, parallel to one another, and each of them about an inch distant from that next to it. At every twenty yards...