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" The Scots have something to plead for their easy reception of an improbable fiction : they are seduced by their fondness for their supposed ancestors. A Scotchman must be a very sturdy SECOND SIGHT 177 moralist, who does not love Scotland better than... "
The Language and Literature of the Scottish Highlands - Página 205
por John Stuart Blackie - 1876 - 331 páginas
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A Dissertation on the Authenticity of the Poems of Ossian

Sir John Sinclair - 1806 - 254 páginas
...boys, and it never was said that any of " them could recite six lines." lie farther observes, " that the Scots have something to plead " for their easy reception of an improbable fiction ; they are se" duced by the fondness for their supposed ancestors. A Scotch" man must be a very sturdy moralist...
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The poems of Ossian, in the orig. Gaelic, with a tr. into Lat. by ..., Volumen1

Ossian - 1807 - 546 páginas
...boys, and it never was said that any of " them could recite six lines." lie farther observes, " that the Scots have something to plead " for their easy reception of an improbable fiction ; they are se" duccd by the fondness for their supposed ancestors. A Scotch" man must be a very sturdy moralist...
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The Poems of Ossian, Volumen1

1807 - 536 páginas
...boys, and it never was said that any of " them could recite six lines." He farther observes, " that the Scots have something to plead " for their easy reception of an improbable fiction; they are se" duced by the fondness for their supposed ancestors. A Scotch" man must be a very sturdy moralist...
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The poems of Ossian in the original Gaelic, Volumen1

James Macpherson - 1807 - 530 páginas
...boys, and it never was said that any of " them could recite six lines/' lie farther observes, " that the Scots have something to plead " for their easy reception of an improbable fiction ; they are se" duced by the fondness for their supposed ancestors. A Scotch" man must be a very sturdy moralist...
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The Ruminator: Containing a Series of Moral, Critical, and ..., Volumen2

Sir Egerton Brydges - 1813 - 354 páginas
...its title to both these characters. Upon the former of these topics Dr. Johnson harshly lObserved, " a Scotchman must be a very sturdy moralist, who does not love Scotland better than truth." It was the bitter remark of a bigotted and ungrateful visitor, whose toryism. (if not his better feelings)...
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The General Biographical Dictionary, Volumen21

Alexander Chalmers - 1815 - 512 páginas
...which no personal injury is the consequence, and which flatters the author with his own ingenuity. The Scots have something to plead for their easy reception...for their supposed ancestors. A Scotchman must be a sturdy moralist who does not love Scotland better than truth ; he will always love it better than inquiry,...
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The General Biographical Dictionary:: Containing an Historical and Critical ...

1815 - 542 páginas
...which no personal injury is the consequence, and which flatters the author with his own ingenuity. The Scots have something to plead for their easy reception...for their supposed ancestors. A Scotchman must be a sturdy moralist who does not love Scotland better than truth; he will always love it better than inquiry,...
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The General Biographical Dictionary:: Containing an Historical and Critical ...

Alexander Chalmers - 1815 - 540 páginas
...which no personal injury is the consequence, and which flatters the author with his own ingenuity. The Scots have something to plead for their easy reception of an improhable fiction : they are seduced by their fondness for their supposed ancestors. A Scotchman must...
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The Works of Samuel Johnson, Ll. D.: Containing essays, tracts, and Journey

Samuel Johnson, Arthur Murphy - 1820 - 424 páginas
...personal injury k TOL. vni. 2 A the consequence, and which flatters the author with his own ingenuity. The Scots have something to plead for their easy reception...by their fondness for their supposed ancestors. A Scotsman must be a very sturdy moralist, who does not love Scotland better than truth ; he will always...
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Lives of Scottish Poets, Volumen2

Joseph Robertson - 1822 - 414 páginas
...ingenuity. The TAUT 3.] P Scots have something to plead for their easy reception of an improhable fietion: they are seduced by their fondness for their supposed ancestors. A Scotchman must be a sturdy moralist, who does not love Scotland better than truth : he will always love it better than...
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