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Examiner, The

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London, England

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39

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The Examiner

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... zeal was much increased by the conversation and ex- ample of two of my companions and contemporaries in particular- John Symmons and John Conybeare. Conybeare had no great depth of learning, for he had not the necessary diligence; but he had quick natural ...

LITERATURE

... was the name of England employed to take arms out of the hands of an insurller population, without (so far as England -was concerned) snbstitutil) any security whatever for the fair hopes that lay in those arms. The result of Mr. Rutson's examination of ...

LITERARY

... Bolingbroke, Walpole, Chat- ham, Pitt, Fox, Burke, Grattan, or Canning; not one of Hume, Gibbon, or Macaulay; not one of fogarth, Sir Joshua Reynolds, or Sir Thomas Lawrence; not one of David Garrick, John Kemble, or Edmund Kean. Among the most interesting ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... one franc, as you will, and veal the same-a lump for a song; and then fish, yon had a fish as long as my arm,-and the overseer stretched out his arm with a grimace- for four sons, there was plenty-now al ! par- bleu ! Yesterdcy arfd To-day. By Cyrus ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... THE LITERARY EXAMINER. Letters of the Earl of Dudley to the BishoP of Liandaff. John Murray. In rather a clumsy preface the Bishop of Liandaf states that the letters of Lord Dadley were printed and advertised a year ago, but that the publicatlon was suspended ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... Dickens's house. Sending in his card, as an American, he is admitted into the author's study, and finds him sitting in a large arm-chair, by his table. When the American has in some degree recovered from the unbounded astonishment he may be supposed to have ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... Western Circuit, a friend of William Adam's, Francis Horner's, Manners Sutton's, and other distinguished men, a fellow of St John's in Cambridge, of good reputation as a scholar and fair ability as a lawyer, but with a practice so moderate and little likely ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... the Le Bas Prize for 1856. 8vo. I857. The People of England: a Lecture. 8vo. The Truth shall make You feel: a Sermon [on John viii., 321 8Eo.: i858. Eric; or, Little by Little: a Tale of Roslyn School. 8vo. 2nd Edit., i858, 8vo; 4h Edit., 1859, 12mo0; ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... again. Following the comical suggestion of Jules Verne in Dr. Ox, Miss Helen Mathers makes the family continue by marrying John Sieveking's second wife to Mark Trevelyan, and the latter, after her death, to another lady, who finally marries Mr. Titmarsh ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... Accusers: embracing a Narrative of Events from the Death of James V., in 1542, untiZ the Death, of the Begent Murray, in 1570. By John Hosack, Barrister-at-Law. Blackwood and Sons. Nearly three hundred years have now elapsed since Mary Stuart, Queen of Scots ...

LITERARY

... put me upon the necessity of accepting employment elsewhere. Of course it is as difficult now as it was then to ascer- tain John Hunt's reason for turning a cold shoulder to the 'Wishing-Caps.' Perhaps they did not take with the public; perhaps other motives ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... likely to have a conversation in Parliament, I am pretty authentically informed, of even a more delicate nature than the last ; John Rolle intending to bring forward his old subject of Mrs Fitzberbert. Rolle and Sheridan had a whispering conference under the ...