It is more than probable that the prince abovementioned possessed both these qualifications in a very eminent degree. Without assurance, he would never have undertaken to speak before... A new system of short-hand - Page 49by Samuel Richardson (teacher of short-hand.) - 1810Full view - About this book
| Elegant extracts - 1816 - 1082 pages
...uneasy by the folly or ill-nature of every one he converses with. A man without modesty is lost to all sense of honour and virtue. It is more than probable, that the Prince above-mentioned, possessed both those qualifications in a very eminent degree. Without assurance, he... | |
| British essayists - 1819 - 376 pages
...uneasy by the folly or ill-nature of every one he converses with. A man without modesty is lost to all sense of honour and virtue. It is more than probable...undertaken to speak before the most august assembly in theworjd: without modesty, he would have pleaded the cause he had taken upon him, though it had appeared... | |
| British essayists - 1823 - 806 pages
...uneasy by the folly or ill-nature of every one he converses with. A man without modesty is lost to all sense of honour and virtue. It is more than probable that the prince abovementioned possessed both these qualifications in a very eminent degree. Without assurance, he... | |
| William Enfield - 1823 - 412 pages
...uneasy by the folly or ill nature of every one he converses with. A man without modesty is lost to all sense of honour and virtue. It is more than probable, that the prince above-mentioned possessed both these qualifications in a very eminent degree. Without assurance he... | |
| Vicesimus Knox - English prose literature - 1824 - 794 pages
...uneasy by the folly or ill nature of every one he converses with. A man without modesty is lost to ess. History was a series of actions, with no other...than chronological succession, independent of each ot those qualifications in а тегу eminent degree. Without assurance, he would never have undertaken... | |
| Spectator (London, England : 1711) - 1824 - 268 pages
...uneasy by the folly or ill-nature of every one h« converses with. A man withomt modesty is lost to all sense of honour and virtue. It is more than probable, that the prince abovementioned possessed both these qualifications in a very efcinent degree. Without assurance he... | |
| William Enfield - Elocution - 1827 - 412 pages
...uneasy by the folly or ill nature of every one he converses with. A man without modesty is lost to all sense of honour and virtue. It is more than probable, that the priuce above-mentioned possessed both these qualifications in a very eminent degree. Without assurance... | |
| Joseph Addison - Bookbinding - 1837 - 478 pages
...uneasy by the folly or ill-nature of every one he converses with. A man without modesty is lost to all sense of honour and virtue. It is more than probable that the prince above-mentioned possessed both these qualifications in a very eminent degree. Without assurance he... | |
| Spectator The - 1853 - 548 pages
...uneasy by the folly or ill nature of every one he converses with. A man without modesty is lost to all sense of honour and virtue. It is more than probable, that the prince abovementioned possessed both these qualifications in a very eminent degree. Without assurance he would... | |
| 1854 - 474 pages
...uneasy by the folly or ill nature of every one he converses with. A man without modesty is lost to all sense of honour and virtue. It is more than probable that the prince above-mentioned possessed both these qualifications in a very eminent degree. Without assurance he... | |
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