12 adverbs to describe how to reprints

It is privately reprinted in Letters from the originals at Welbeck Abbey, 1909.

The arbitress of the passions indeed wrote nothing to compare in popularity with "Robinson Crusoe," but before 1740 her "Love in Excess" ran through as many editions as "Moll Flanders" and its abridgments, while "Idalia: or, the Unfortunate Mistress" had been reprinted three times separately and twice with her collected novels before a reissue of Defoe's "Fortunate Mistress" was undertaken.

" This letter was extensively reprinted, not only in the anti-slavery but in pro-slavery newspapers, both in the North and South.

The whole collection was freqnently reprinted, 1638, 1640, 1643, 1652, 1664 and 1668 twice.

Nothing can be done for B. but to reprint the old cuts in as homely but good a style as possible.

Sparks quotes 57, but inexactly, and with his usual literary manipulation; these were reprinted (1886, 16°) by W.O. Stoddard, at Denver, Colorado; and in Hale's "Washington" (1888).

[B], is reprinted mainly to show the difficulties to which Wordsworth was reduced by the artificial method of arrangement referred to.

I have never seen a copy of the original pamphlet, it is not to be found in any of our public libraries, and I have heard of but one as still existing, although the Confession itself has been repeatedly reprinted.

p. 4.), was in the habit of making extensive alterations in his productions, as they were severally reprinted, and the suppression of this stanza may have proceeded from many other causes than repentance of the praise he had bestowed upon a rival.

Dr. Brinton published in 1886 an interesting pamphlet entitled The Conception of Love in Some American Languages, which was afterward reprinted in his Essays of an Americanist.

The first minister of Trinity Church was the Rev. Edward Law, a gentleman, who, according to a local historian, "ably defended the belief of the adorable Trinity in a series of letters, assisted by the Rev. R. Baxter, of Stonyhurst, against a Unitarian minister, the Rev. T. C. Holland, which appeared in the Preston Chronicle," and were subsequently reprinted and sold for the enlightenment and mystification of all polemically-minded men.

If, within the last few years, a tolerably popular history of France had been published in England, and cheaply reprinted here, (as it surely would have been,) we doubt whether Mr. Godwin would have undertaken his laborious and elaborate work,or, if he had, whether he would have readily found a bookseller bold enough to pay an adequate price for the copyright.

12 adverbs to describe how to  reprints  - Adverbs for  reprints