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London Encyclopaedia (1829)

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substance, and in price, to the largest portion of the reading community... Thus, instead of appropriating the present profits of the undertaking, he has invariably thrown them back upon the work itself; and he trusts, improvement in the variety, the originality, and the accuracy of the articles in each department is visible to every reader. The contributors possess the highest qualifications for the respective tasks assigned to them; their number has been augmented, and their remuneration increased. ...in all the
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Now that the work is thus far advanced, and its publication has been punctual and regular, the Proprietor trusts that those who hesitated to become purchasers, lest the speculation should fail, will no longer apprehend a result, to avert which, were it necessary, he would readily sacrifice all the
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feels it incumbent upon him to offer his grateful acknowledgments to the Public, for the unexampled success which his arduous undertaking has hitherto experienced... This most welcome and efficient testimony of public favour he chiefly attributes to the Plan of the Work;—its adaptation in form, in
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and really important in works of three times its magnitude and price; and that it may be universally acceptable,—in all the great debatable points, which belong not properly to knowledge, because the opinions of the wisest and the best of men are at variance upon them, the
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property he possesses in the world. He has embarked in the undertaking, and the arrangements for its completion are as perfect and as stable as any thing which man can devise or accomplish.
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is unknown; they are not aware probably of its nature and object—that with a cheapness, which, but for the extensiveness of its sale, would injure the Publisher, it combines all that is
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is not inferior to any of its predecessors or contemporaries, while it combines in every branch all the improvements which are to be derived from its being the last in order of time.
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Universal Dictionary of Science, Art, Literature and Practical Mechanics: comprising a Popular View of the Present State of Knowledge
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in 1825. It may be found in two original editions of 22 volumes, published 1829 and 1839, as well as more recent
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The London Encyclopaedia, or Universal Dictionary of Science, Art, Literature and Practical Mechanics
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animosities. The object of the work is to give information on all subjects, but not to play the
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an arsenal, furnishing them with weapons to carry on either an offensive or a defensive war.
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The History of England: from the Invasion of Julius Caesar to the Death of George the Third
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and classes may here learn what each other think; but they will not find the
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On the appearance of the Seventh Edition of Part the First of the
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There are still very large classes of the community to whom the
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Index

London Encyclopaedia (1825)
too many or overly lengthy quotations
summarize the quotations
Wikiquote
Wikisource

publication
London
bookseller
Thomas Tegg
reprints
Proprietor
science
literature

Editor
political
religious
advocate
Churchmen
Dissenters
sects
scepticism
irreligion
moral principle
Tegg, Thomas (1776-1845)
The History of England: from the Invasion of Julius Caesar to the Death of George the Third
OCLC
3392197
OL

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