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1829 Aug. 11
Reformists review.
Peel
His Acts
9
No reform as to
lengthiness in discourse
<p.(4)
So much for the bulk of the whole. Now as to light of the the
In ordinary unlearned discourse length of — [distance between nominative
case and verb] has its limit: in learned discourse
( meaning<a/dd> always under matchless constitution)
it has none. between the nominative <add>at the beginning and the verb [through with
a whole length of it] not fewer than four of these<a/dd> small-typed and
close-written pages: all this while panting almost t over
the unhappy substantive looking with longing
for the moment of the so <add>his long deferred union with his
beloved speech-fellow. No man who either at Westminster
or St Paul's has been whipt through either of the
grammar can be at a loss to have a stranger to the
of the parts of speech is to the of with which they sigh
for each others f fond embrace. What would be have been the feelings
or of one of his butchers? The days times in which this
gave birth to those statutes which his operators these affirmation of his
have taken for their model were those in which in a
some files would interview between the day which
give to the Hero and Herum the first sight of each other, and
the night which first consigned them to the same place
of rue and rapture.
In some eyes indignation rather than might
seem the To called for by the occasion: but the good humoured pleasantry is at any rate more pleasant
than : and, so long as malignation is kept down, sensibility
is the less greatest upon and wounded
Identifier: | JB/011/146/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 11. |
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1829-08-11 |
9 |
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011 |
law amendment |
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146 |
reformists review |
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001 |
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text sheet |
1 |
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recto |
c4 |
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jeremy bentham |
b&m 1829 |
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arthur moore; richard doane |
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1829 |
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3843 |
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