The Works of the Right Honorable Edmund Burke, Volume 1Little, Brown, 1884 - Great Britain |
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Page 13
... raise our ardor for more . The miseries derived to mankind from superstition under the name of religion , and of ecclesiastical tyranny under the name of church gov- ernment , have been clearly and usefully exposed . We begin to think ...
... raise our ardor for more . The miseries derived to mankind from superstition under the name of religion , and of ecclesiastical tyranny under the name of church gov- ernment , have been clearly and usefully exposed . We begin to think ...
Page 33
... raised by his own oppression are the effects of disaffection to the prince's government . Then is the natural violence of despotism inflamed and aggra- vated by hatred and revenge . To deserve well of the state is a crime against the ...
... raised by his own oppression are the effects of disaffection to the prince's government . Then is the natural violence of despotism inflamed and aggra- vated by hatred and revenge . To deserve well of the state is a crime against the ...
Page 35
... raised above the others , is completed by their suspicions , and their dread of losing an authority , which has no sup- port in the common utility of the nation . A Genoese or a Venetian republic is a concealed despotism ; where you ...
... raised above the others , is completed by their suspicions , and their dread of losing an authority , which has no sup- port in the common utility of the nation . A Genoese or a Venetian republic is a concealed despotism ; where you ...
Page 78
... raising Ideas of Things . 246 III . General Words before Ideas 249 IV . The Effect of Words 250 V. Examples that Words may affect without raising Images • • VI . Poetry not strictly an Imitative Art VII . How Words influence the ...
... raising Ideas of Things . 246 III . General Words before Ideas 249 IV . The Effect of Words 250 V. Examples that Words may affect without raising Images • • VI . Poetry not strictly an Imitative Art VII . How Words influence the ...
Page 82
... images to the whole species , it must necessari- ly be allowed , that the pleasures and the pains which every object excites in one man , it must raise in all mankind , whilst it operates naturally , simply , and 82 INTRODUCTION .
... images to the whole species , it must necessari- ly be allowed , that the pleasures and the pains which every object excites in one man , it must raise in all mankind , whilst it operates naturally , simply , and 82 INTRODUCTION .
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administration America ancholy animals appear body cause of beauty cerning civil list colonies colors consequences consideration considered constitution continued court danger darkness debt degree disposition Duke of Choiseul duties effect England equal eral evil export family compact favor feeling France friends give greater Guadaloupe House of Commons idea images imagination increase infinite interest Jamaica kind laws least less light lord Lord Bute mankind manner means measures members of Parliament ment mind ministers ministry nation nature necessary never object observed operation opinion pain Parliament passions peace establishment persons pleased pleasure political principle produce proportion purpose qualities reason revenue ruin SECTION sense sensible sion slavery smooth society sophism sort Spain species spirit Stamp Act sublime suppose taste taxes terror things tion trade unoperative virtue whilst whole words