The Quarterly Review, 72. köideJ. Murray, 1843 |
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Page 354
... observe that he never could have pursued his studies in a public library , and that , like Gibbon , he possessed in his own house all that was required . Public libraries , * important as they are as repositories of manuscripts and ...
... observe that he never could have pursued his studies in a public library , and that , like Gibbon , he possessed in his own house all that was required . Public libraries , * important as they are as repositories of manuscripts and ...
Page 371
... observe that , if a pecus were the first device impressed upon it , there is no known speci- men of it in existence . ' Now in the British Museum , not to mention other less accessible collections , there is in existence a specimen of ...
... observe that , if a pecus were the first device impressed upon it , there is no known speci- men of it in existence . ' Now in the British Museum , not to mention other less accessible collections , there is in existence a specimen of ...
Page 452
... observation of the body ; and no shrewder observer ever lived . ART . V. - Theognis Restitutus . The Personal ... observe this more prosaic period interposing itself between the two rich and prolific ages of Grecian poetry . Above ...
... observation of the body ; and no shrewder observer ever lived . ART . V. - Theognis Restitutus . The Personal ... observe this more prosaic period interposing itself between the two rich and prolific ages of Grecian poetry . Above ...
Contents
The Lady of the Manor Being a Series of Conversations | 25 |
Peregrine Bunce By the Author of Sayings | 53 |
25 | 72 |
Copyright | |
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