The English Review, Volume 11F. & J. Rivington., 1849 |
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Page 8
... Government from her husband's pay , amounting to about 4s . 6d . a week , by employments away from home , as hawking fish about the streets of Devonport and other neighbouring towns ; or she toils day by day with her needle at plain ...
... Government from her husband's pay , amounting to about 4s . 6d . a week , by employments away from home , as hawking fish about the streets of Devonport and other neighbouring towns ; or she toils day by day with her needle at plain ...
Page 13
... Government , furnishes us with the most authentic accounts of the want of women , while so many thou- sands are pining in England for the very scantiest subsistence . In New Brunswick we are told that " labour , such as the business of ...
... Government , furnishes us with the most authentic accounts of the want of women , while so many thou- sands are pining in England for the very scantiest subsistence . In New Brunswick we are told that " labour , such as the business of ...
Page 18
... government - then it is the noblest of studies , always ex- cepting those which bear immediate reference to the salvation of man . By such a course we may arrive , as surely as by a reverent study of nature , at an apprehension and ...
... government - then it is the noblest of studies , always ex- cepting those which bear immediate reference to the salvation of man . By such a course we may arrive , as surely as by a reverent study of nature , at an apprehension and ...
Page 26
... government ; and happy , strangely happy , is that democratic Republic which falls under anything short of a simple and oppressive despotism ; we cannot call to mind any instance of so fortunate a lot . The liberties of Florence ...
... government ; and happy , strangely happy , is that democratic Republic which falls under anything short of a simple and oppressive despotism ; we cannot call to mind any instance of so fortunate a lot . The liberties of Florence ...
Page 28
... government , and the economy of free institutions ? He has but to compare the expenditure of Pisis- tratus with that of Cleon - the taxes levied by Charles I. with those imposed by William of Orange . Does he stand 28 Florentine History .
... government , and the economy of free institutions ? He has but to compare the expenditure of Pisis- tratus with that of Cleon - the taxes levied by Charles I. with those imposed by William of Orange . Does he stand 28 Florentine History .
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