The Port Folio, Volume 2Editor and Asbury Dickens, 1809 |
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... 471 Hayti , Memoirs of , 35-103-188 -325-414-490 Hamlet , Remarks on the Charac- ter of , History , Natural , · • 62 116 · · Hutchinson , Col. Memoirs of , 513 Page Page Intelligence , Literary , 133-556 • Philosophical ,
... 471 Hayti , Memoirs of , 35-103-188 -325-414-490 Hamlet , Remarks on the Charac- ter of , History , Natural , · • 62 116 · · Hutchinson , Col. Memoirs of , 513 Page Page Intelligence , Literary , 133-556 • Philosophical ,
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... Literary , 133-556 • Philosophical , Scientific and Mis- 555 Republic , The Literary , Readers and Correspondents , to , 9 81-170-282-577 cellaneous , 557 • Reflections on Ridicule , • 324 King William's Ring , decsription Regnard ...
... Literary , 133-556 • Philosophical , Scientific and Mis- 555 Republic , The Literary , Readers and Correspondents , to , 9 81-170-282-577 cellaneous , 557 • Reflections on Ridicule , • 324 King William's Ring , decsription Regnard ...
Page 9
... LITERARY REPUBLIC - FOR THE PORT FOLIO . From the Original Spanish . ( Concluded from Volume I , page 494. ) GRATEFUL for this information , I left the room , and saw pass in order the Greek , Latin , and other historians . Desirous to ...
... LITERARY REPUBLIC - FOR THE PORT FOLIO . From the Original Spanish . ( Concluded from Volume I , page 494. ) GRATEFUL for this information , I left the room , and saw pass in order the Greek , Latin , and other historians . Desirous to ...
Page 10
... his courage , than attractive by his elegance to his friends , is Julius Cæsar , the most perfect production of Nature in genius , valour , and judgment . Succeeding him in the robes of a courtier , though 10 THE LITERARY REPUBLIC .
... his courage , than attractive by his elegance to his friends , is Julius Cæsar , the most perfect production of Nature in genius , valour , and judgment . Succeeding him in the robes of a courtier , though 10 THE LITERARY REPUBLIC .
Page 11
... , the Stoics considered all events indifferent ; nei- ther desired nor feared them , nor did their happiness or unhappiness depend on enjoyment or loss . Other philosophers held other opinions , as various as the. THE LITERARY REPUBLIC .
... , the Stoics considered all events indifferent ; nei- ther desired nor feared them , nor did their happiness or unhappiness depend on enjoyment or loss . Other philosophers held other opinions , as various as the. THE LITERARY REPUBLIC .
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