National Review, Volume 3Robert Theobold, 1856 |
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Page 8
... interest rather than a personal share in action . When , however , the inquiry into the spread of the United Irish societies within the college was conducted under the formidable auspices of Chancellor Fitzgibbon , young Moore showed ...
... interest rather than a personal share in action . When , however , the inquiry into the spread of the United Irish societies within the college was conducted under the formidable auspices of Chancellor Fitzgibbon , young Moore showed ...
Page 14
... interest , as no doubt shadowing forth to some extent the attitude of his own mind in matters of theolo- gical belief . It describes in a superficial way some of the forms of human error , and concludes with some good lines inculcating ...
... interest , as no doubt shadowing forth to some extent the attitude of his own mind in matters of theolo- gical belief . It describes in a superficial way some of the forms of human error , and concludes with some good lines inculcating ...
Page 18
... interest of all my friends has been tenfold increased since this event , you would not wonder , my darling mother , at the anxiety which I feel lest those , whom in this world I am chiefly anxious to please , should in the least degree ...
... interest of all my friends has been tenfold increased since this event , you would not wonder , my darling mother , at the anxiety which I feel lest those , whom in this world I am chiefly anxious to please , should in the least degree ...
Page 21
... interest ; and , as the author says in one of his prefaces , " their ridicule , thanks to the undying nature of human absurd- ity , appears to have lost as yet but little of the original freshness of its first application . " Old ...
... interest ; and , as the author says in one of his prefaces , " their ridicule , thanks to the undying nature of human absurd- ity , appears to have lost as yet but little of the original freshness of its first application . " Old ...
Page 22
... interests of his client . Lord Moira's shyness of the subject , and something of coldness in his tone , hurt Moore ... interest for him with ministers at home , and somewhat point- edly freed Lord Moira himself from any future claim he ...
... interests of his client . Lord Moira's shyness of the subject , and something of coldness in his tone , hurt Moore ... interest for him with ministers at home , and somewhat point- edly freed Lord Moira himself from any future claim he ...
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