The Life and Letters of Lord Macaulay, Volumen2Longmans, Green, and Company, 1876 |
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Página 5
... person , we are sure , who has read this memoir , will doubt that there are men whose abuse is an honour . " 6 Mr. Wallace did not choose to rest quietly under a castigation which even Macaulay subsequently admitted to have been in ...
... person , we are sure , who has read this memoir , will doubt that there are men whose abuse is an honour . " 6 Mr. Wallace did not choose to rest quietly under a castigation which even Macaulay subsequently admitted to have been in ...
Página 8
... person who knew Sir Walter , who had at least seen him and spoken with him , should be charged with this article . Many people are living who had a most intimate acquaintance with him . I know no more of him than I know of Dryden or ...
... person who knew Sir Walter , who had at least seen him and spoken with him , should be charged with this article . Many people are living who had a most intimate acquaintance with him . I know no more of him than I know of Dryden or ...
Página 12
... person ac- customed to the virulence of English factions , is more formidable than you can well conceive to the members of the Civil Service , who are quite unaccustomed to be dragged rudely before the public . It is , therefore 12 CH ...
... person ac- customed to the virulence of English factions , is more formidable than you can well conceive to the members of the Civil Service , who are quite unaccustomed to be dragged rudely before the public . It is , therefore 12 CH ...
Página 22
... person lately dead ; but , when a group of sculpture is set up over a man who has been dead more than five hundred years , such lamentation is nonsensical . Who can help laughing at the thought of tears of regret shed because a man who ...
... person lately dead ; but , when a group of sculpture is set up over a man who has been dead more than five hundred years , such lamentation is nonsensical . Who can help laughing at the thought of tears of regret shed because a man who ...
Página 40
... person among the bystanders , through ravished , or the Christians persecuted . He often makes , when he cannot readily find , an occasion to insult our religion ; which he hates so cordially that he might seem to revenge some personal ...
... person among the bystanders , through ravished , or the Christians persecuted . He often makes , when he cannot readily find , an occasion to insult our religion ; which he hates so cordially that he might seem to revenge some personal ...
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admirable Albany amusing Bill breakfast Cabinet called character Church Corn Laws crown 8vo Dear Napier December delight diary dinner Edinburgh Edinburgh Review Edition effect Ellis England English feel fellow friends give glad Government Hannah heard heart History honour hope hour House of Commons hundred India interest journal labour Lady Leigh Hunt letter literary live London Longman look Lord Aberdeen Lord Clive Lord Ellenborough Lord Hotham Lord John Lord Lansdowne LORD MACAULAY Lord Melbourne's Lord Palmerston Macaulay writes Macaulay's mind Ministers morning nation never noble once opinion Palmerston Parliament party passage passed Peel person pleasant pleasure political Protagoras question Review soon speech spirit T. B. MACAULAY talked things thought tion told took Tories Trevelyan vols volume vote walked Warren Hastings Whig whole wish words written wrote
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