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" We have set down that, that in our judgement agreeth best with reason and good order. Which notwithstanding, if it seem to any to be too rough hewed, let him plane it out more smoothly ; and I shall not only not envy it, but, in the behalf of my country,... "
The English Grammar - Page 40
by Ben Jonson - 1928 - 93 pages
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The Works of Ben Jonson...: With Notes Critical and Explanatory ..., Volume 9

Ben Jonson, William Gifford - 1816 - 464 pages
...reason and good order. Which notwithstanding, if it seem to any to be too rough hewed, let him plane it out more smoothly, and I shall not only not envy it, but, in the behalf of my country, most heartily thank him for so great a benefit ; hoping that I shall be thought...
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Philological Museum

Julius Charles Hare - 1833 - 726 pages
...reason and good order. Which notwithstanding, if it seem to any to be too rough hewed, let him plane it out more smoothly ; and I shall not only not envy it, but, in the behalf of my country, most heartily thank him for so great a benefit ; hoping that I shall be thought...
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Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 10

1840 - 870 pages
...reason and good order, which, notwithstanding, if it seem to any to be too rough-hewed, let him plane it out more smoothly, and I shall not only not envy it, but, in the behalf of my country, most heartily thank him for so great a benefit, hoping that I shall be thought...
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A Hand-book of the English Language: For the Use of Students of the ...

Robert Gordon Latham - 1860 - 486 pages
...reason and good order. Which notwithstanding, if it seem to any to be too rough hewed, let him plane it out more smoothly ; and I shall not only not envy it, but, in the behalf of my country, most heartily thank him for so great a benefit ; hoping that I shall be thought...
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The Works of Ben Jonson: With Notes Critical and Explanatory, and ..., Volume 9

Ben Jonson, William Gifford - 1875 - 560 pages
...reason and good order. Which notwithstanding, if it seem to any to be too rough hewed, let him plane it out more smoothly, and I shall not only not envy it, but, in the behalf of my country, most heartily thank him for so great a benefit; hoping that I shall be thought...
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History of the English Language

Thomas R. Lounsbury - 1894 - 556 pages
...reason and good order. Which notwithstanding, if it seem to any to be too rough hewed, let him plane it out more smoothly, and I shall not only not envy it, but in the behalf of my country, most heartily thank him for so great a benefit ; hoping that I shall be thought...
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Blackwood's Magazine, Volume 47

1840 - 882 pages
...reason and good order, which, notwithstanding, if it seem to any to be too rough-hewed, let him plane it out more smoothly, and I shall not only not envy it, but, in the behalf of my country, most heartily thank him for so great a benefit, hoping that I shall be thought...
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History of the English Language

Thomas Raynesford Lounsbury - 1924 - 548 pages
...reason and good order. Which notwithstanding, if it seem to any to be too rough hewed, let him plane it out more smoothly, and I shall not only not envy it, but in the behalf of my country, most heartily thank him for so great a benefit ; hoping that I shall be thought...
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The American Language: An Inquiry into the Development of English in the ...

Henry Louis Mencken - 1921 - 526 pages
...reason and good order. Which notwithstanding, if it seem to any to be too rough hewed, let him plane it out more smoothly, and I shall not only not envy it, but in the behalf of my country most heartily thank him for so great a benefit ; hoping that I shall be thought...
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