The Works of the Right Honorable Edmund Burke, Volume 1Little, Brown, 1869 - Great Britain |
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Page xix
... sense was either perverted or obscured , are now rectified . Two or three small in- sertions have also been made from a quarto copy cor- rected by Mr. Burke himself . From the same source something more has been drawn in the shape of ...
... sense was either perverted or obscured , are now rectified . Two or three small in- sertions have also been made from a quarto copy cor- rected by Mr. Burke himself . From the same source something more has been drawn in the shape of ...
Page 6
... sense of its own weakness , of its subordinate rank in the creation , and of the extreme danger of letting the imagination loose upon some subjects , may very plausibly attack everything the most excellent and venerable ; that it would ...
... sense of its own weakness , of its subordinate rank in the creation , and of the extreme danger of letting the imagination loose upon some subjects , may very plausibly attack everything the most excellent and venerable ; that it would ...
Page 33
... sense of the dignity of their nature , is lost in their slavery . The day , says Homer , which makes a man a slave , takes away half his worth ; and , in fact , he loses every impulse ' to action , but that low and base one of fear . In ...
... sense of the dignity of their nature , is lost in their slavery . The day , says Homer , which makes a man a slave , takes away half his worth ; and , in fact , he loses every impulse ' to action , but that low and base one of fear . In ...
Page 34
... sense of feeling ; the weight of tyranny at last becomes insupportable ; but the remedy is not so easy : in general , the only remedy by which they attempt to cure the tyranny is to change the tyrant . This is , and always was , the ...
... sense of feeling ; the weight of tyranny at last becomes insupportable ; but the remedy is not so easy : in general , the only remedy by which they attempt to cure the tyranny is to change the tyrant . This is , and always was , the ...
Page 52
... sense and interpretation of these laws . Thus we were brought back to our old incertitude . New laws were made to expound the old ; and new diffi- culties arose upon the new laws ; as words multiplied , opportunities of cavilling upon ...
... sense and interpretation of these laws . Thus we were brought back to our old incertitude . New laws were made to expound the old ; and new diffi- culties arose upon the new laws ; as words multiplied , opportunities of cavilling upon ...
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administration America appear body cabal cause of beauty cerning civil list colonies colors consequences consideration considered constitution court crown danger darkness debt degree disposition Duke of Choiseul duties effect England equal eral evil export faction family compact favor feeling France friends give greater Guadaloupe honor House of Commons idea imagination interest Jamaica kind least less light Lord Lord Bute mankind manner means measures members of Parliament ment mind ministers ministry nation nature never object observed operation opinion pain Parliament party passions peace establishment persons pleasure political popular principle produce proportion purpose qualities reader reason revenue royal fam SECTION sense sion slavery smooth society sophism sort species spirit Stamp Act sublime suppose taste taxes terror things tion trade unoperative virtue Whig whilst whole words