| 1814 - 556 pages
...passage of Junius. ' I am not a stranger to this par * nobile fratrum. I have served under the one, und have been • forty times promised to be served by the" other. I don't think 4 ' possible to characteri/e the oqe, without baring recourse to Glover's Political Memoirs. Jan, the... | |
| Junius, John Mason Good - 1812 - 548 pages
...the latter at this time chancellor of the exchequer. I am not a stranger to this par mobile frAtnm. I have served under the one, and have been forty times...either without having recourse to the other ; but any body who knows one of them, may easily obtain an idea of the other : Thus now ; suppose you acquainted... | |
| Junius - 1813 - 552 pages
...friend, to give up this noble pair as enfans perdus. I am not a stranger to this par nobile fratrum. I have served under the one, and have been forty times...characterise either without having recourse to the other; but any body who knows one of them, may easily obtain an idea of the other: Thus now; suppose you acquainted... | |
| Thomas Busby - 1816 - 248 pages
...any of your gentlemen authors," (In the eleventh of his Miscellaneous Letters) " I have served under one, and have been forty times promised to be served by the other,"* And other similar declarations in his various Epistles, they will not encourage the opinion, that JUNIUS... | |
| George Coventry (of Wandsworth.) - 1825 - 440 pages
...the former lord-lieutenant of Ireland, and the latter chancellor of the exchequer, Junius says, — " I am not a stranger to this par nobilefratrum. I have...been forty times promised to be served by the other." This assertion comes closely home to some officer. Facts are stubborn things. Now I know it to be an... | |
| George Coventry - 1825 - 444 pages
...latter chancellor of the exchequer, Junius says, — " I am not a stranger to this par nobik fratrum. I have served under the one, and have been forty times promised to be served by the other." This assertion comes closely home to some officer. Facts are stubborn things. Now I know it to be an... | |
| George Coventry (of Wandsworth.) - 1825 - 440 pages
...cha cellor of the exchequer, Junius says, — "I ai not a stranger to this par nobilefratrum. I ha1 \ served under the one, and have been forty times promised to be served by the other." This assertion comes closely home to some officer. Facts are stubborn things. Now I know it to be an... | |
| Junius - 1829 - 448 pages
...don't think it possible to characterise either without having recourse to the other ; but any body who knows one of them, may easily obtain an idea of...his ingenuity, and a something, that at times looks something like good-nature, but it is not, and you have the direct and actual character of the peer... | |
| Junius - 1841 - 166 pages
...to force themselves out of the world's contempt. ... I am not a stranger to this par nubile fratrum. I have served under the one, and have been forty times promised to be served by the other. . . . The peer, a boaster without spirit, and a pretender to wit, without a grain of sense; in a word,... | |
| 1849 - 606 pages
...par nobile fratrum, (Lord Townshend, and his brother Charles, then Chancellor of the Exchequer.) / have served under the one, and have been forty times promised to be served by the other."\ Now, who but Barr6 or Macleane is likely to have written this sentence ? They both served under Lord... | |
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