The Works of the Right Honorable Edmund Burke, Volume 1Little, Brown, 1884 - Great Britain |
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Page xviii
... regard has been paid to chrono- logical order , which , in the last edition , was in some instances broken , to insert pieces that were not dis- covered till it was too late to introduce them in their proper places . In the Appendix to ...
... regard has been paid to chrono- logical order , which , in the last edition , was in some instances broken , to insert pieces that were not dis- covered till it was too late to introduce them in their proper places . In the Appendix to ...
Page 28
... regard for one of these , would you not hide that distinction ? You would not pray him to compassionate the poor Frenchman , or the unhappy German . Far from it ; you would speak of him as a foreigner ; an accident to which all are ...
... regard for one of these , would you not hide that distinction ? You would not pray him to compassionate the poor Frenchman , or the unhappy German . Far from it ; you would speak of him as a foreigner ; an accident to which all are ...
Page 33
... regard of a tyrant is as unconstant and capricious as that of a woman ; and concluding his time to be short , he makes haste to fill up the measure of his iniquity , in rapine , in luxury , and in revenge . Every avenue to the throne is ...
... regard of a tyrant is as unconstant and capricious as that of a woman ; and concluding his time to be short , he makes haste to fill up the measure of his iniquity , in rapine , in luxury , and in revenge . Every avenue to the throne is ...
Page 44
... regard the natural rights of man- kind , they must appear , in reality and truth , no bet- ter than pitiful and oppressive oligarchies . . pro- After so fair an examen , wherein nothing has been exaggerated ; no fact produced which ...
... regard the natural rights of man- kind , they must appear , in reality and truth , no bet- ter than pitiful and oppressive oligarchies . . pro- After so fair an examen , wherein nothing has been exaggerated ; no fact produced which ...
Page 76
... regard to the Passions . [ IV ] The Same Subject continued V. Power • 133 134 138 · VI . Privation VII . Vastness VIII . Infinity • • IX . Succession and Uniformity X. Magnitude in Building XI . Infinity in Pleasing Objects XII ...
... regard to the Passions . [ IV ] The Same Subject continued V. Power • 133 134 138 · VI . Privation VII . Vastness VIII . Infinity • • IX . Succession and Uniformity X. Magnitude in Building XI . Infinity in Pleasing Objects XII ...
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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