The Works of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke, Volume 1H. Milford, Oxford University Press, 1906 |
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Page 32
... received in proportion to the greatness of his services . Agricola is a strong instance of this . No man had done greater things , nor with more honest ambition . Yet on his return to court he was obliged to enter Rome with all the ...
... received in proportion to the greatness of his services . Agricola is a strong instance of this . No man had done greater things , nor with more honest ambition . Yet on his return to court he was obliged to enter Rome with all the ...
Page 71
... received by the senses , or in combining those images in a new manner , and according to a different order . This power is called imagination ; and to this belongs what- ever is called wit , fancy , invention , and the like . But it ...
... received by the senses , or in combining those images in a new manner , and according to a different order . This power is called imagination ; and to this belongs what- ever is called wit , fancy , invention , and the like . But it ...
Page 267
... received from every part . Thus , as our manufacturers have not deserted , nor the manufacture left us , nor the consumption declined , nor the revenue sunk ; so neither has trade , which is at once the result , measure , and cause of ...
... received from every part . Thus , as our manufacturers have not deserted , nor the manufacture left us , nor the consumption declined , nor the revenue sunk ; so neither has trade , which is at once the result , measure , and cause of ...
Contents
or a View | 1 |
A Philosophical Inquiry into the Origin of | 55 |
Introduction | 65 |
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