A Sequel to the Printed Paper Lately Circulated in Warwickshire by the Rev. Charles Curtis |
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Page v
... causes . From the ordinary occurrences of life , as they influence the conduct of extraordinary men , the play biographer collects fuch fcattered rays as may be concentrated into one bright affemblage of truth upon the character which ...
... causes . From the ordinary occurrences of life , as they influence the conduct of extraordinary men , the play biographer collects fuch fcattered rays as may be concentrated into one bright affemblage of truth upon the character which ...
Page vi
... cause seldom has it in his power to produce in the minds of others , thofe emotions which he may himself most keenly , and most fincerely feel . Though proofs be accumulated , though arguments be framed , though eloquence be difplayed ...
... cause seldom has it in his power to produce in the minds of others , thofe emotions which he may himself most keenly , and most fincerely feel . Though proofs be accumulated , though arguments be framed , though eloquence be difplayed ...
Page x
... cause to be printed , circulate or fuffer to be republished , with or without oaths , with or without witneffes , with or without auxiliaries , in any place , at any time , and under any form . Quoth Colly to Pope , tho ' in verse you ...
... cause to be printed , circulate or fuffer to be republished , with or without oaths , with or without witneffes , with or without auxiliaries , in any place , at any time , and under any form . Quoth Colly to Pope , tho ' in verse you ...
Page 14
... cause he did not retort fome of Mr. Curtis's expref- fions , which we knew to be violent - because , instead of obliquely " infinuating , " that he thought Mr. Curtis " perjured , " he openly acknowledged that he continued to to fufpect ...
... cause he did not retort fome of Mr. Curtis's expref- fions , which we knew to be violent - because , instead of obliquely " infinuating , " that he thought Mr. Curtis " perjured , " he openly acknowledged that he continued to to fufpect ...
Page 15
... cause it was made in the most inoffenfive terms poffible -and because we conceived it to be founded upon bet- ter grounds than the mere conjecture of Dr. Parr . Dec. 9th . Dec. 11th . J. EYRE , W. MARSH , M. D. Farther Exceptions of MR ...
... cause it was made in the most inoffenfive terms poffible -and because we conceived it to be founded upon bet- ter grounds than the mere conjecture of Dr. Parr . Dec. 9th . Dec. 11th . J. EYRE , W. MARSH , M. D. Farther Exceptions of MR ...
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A Sequel to the Printed Paper Lately Circulated in Warwickshire by the Rev ... Samuel Parr No preview available - 2017 |
A Sequel to the Printed Paper Lately Circulated in Warwickshire by the Rev ... Samuel Parr No preview available - 2017 |
Common terms and phrases
affertion affociation againſt Aldgate alfo anfwer anonymous letters becauſe Birmingham cafe caufe cauſe CHARLES CURTIS Chriftian circumftances confefs confequence conftitution converfation correfpondent Coventry curiofity Curtis defire difcuffion diffenters difpofed difpute diftinctions duty equal eſtabliſhed expoftulate expreffion exprefs Eyre faid fame favour fecond feem feen fenfe fent fhall fhould fincere firft firſt fo complex fociety folemn fome fometimes foon fpirit friends ftate ftrength fubject fuch fuffer fufpect fufpicions fuppofed fupport fure gentleman himſelf honour houfe imputation intereft interview itſelf JAMES EYRE juftice laft lefs Mackintosh meaſures ment moft moral moſt muft muſt myſelf neceffary neceffity obferved occafion opinion paffage paffed paffions Parr perfons pleaſure poffible political prefent prefervation Priestley Priestley's letters principles printed paper profefs proof purpoſe reader reafons Rector reform refpect Solyhull ſtate ſtatement ſuch thefe theſe thofe thoſe tion underſtand uſed Veritas whatſoever whofe whoſe words writing written
Popular passages
Page 55 - It is good also not to try experiments in states, except the necessity be urgent, or the utility evident ; and well to beware that it be the reformation that draweth on the change, and not the desire of change that pretendeth the reformation.
Page 63 - O yet a nobler task awaits thy hand, (For what can war, but endless war still breed ?) Till truth and right from violence be freed, And public faith clear'd from the shameful brand Of public fraud. In vain doth valour bleed, While avarice and rapine share the land.
Page 81 - ... question with perspicuity, states it with precision, and pursues it with easy unaffected method. Sometimes, perhaps, he may amuse his readers with excursions into paradox, but he never bewilders them by flights into romance. His philosophy is far more just and far more amiable than the philosophy of Paine, and his eloquence is only not equal to the eloquence of Burke. He is argumentative without sophistry, fervid without fury, profound without obscurity, and sublime without extravagance.
Page 90 - Tow'red cities pleafe us then, And the bufy hum of men, Where throngs of knights and barons bold In weeds of peace high triumphs hold, With ftore of ladies, whofe bright eyes Rain influence, and judge the prize Of wit, or arms, while both contend To win her grace, whom all commend.
Page 104 - I have long been collecting with indefatigable industry, upon which I have expended more than half the produce of more than twenty years...
Page 184 - I who think that even the excefs of reafon is not alwayt defirable, and that mankind generally find their account better in mediums than in extremes ? Harrington, in his Oceana, has alfo inquired into the higheft point of liberty to which the conftitution of a ftate may be carried. But of him indeed it may be faid, that, for want of knowing the nature of real liberty, he bufied himfelf in purfuit of an imaginary one, and that he built a Chalcedon, though he had a Byzantium before his eyes.
Page 173 - Nor is it intended that there mould be a.ny thing violent or painful in, the former, any more than in the latter. Such is the benign wifdom of HIM, with whom a thoufand years are as one day, and one day as a thoufand Dr.
Page 63 - Upon the first perusal of Mr. Burke's book, I felt. like many other men, its magic force; and, like many other men, I was at last delivered from the illusions which had " cheated my reason," and borne me on from admiration to assent.
Page 72 - Reigns solely in the breast of every man : They sell the pasture now, to buy the horse ; Following the mirror of all Christian kings With winged heels, as English Mercuries. For now sits Expectation in the air; And hides a sword, from hilt unto the point, With crowns imperial, crowns, and coronets, Promis'd to Harry, and his followers.
Page 69 - It (hews only, that the doctrine does not include what it was never meant to include, without proving that what it does include deferves the imputation of being falfe. All truth confifts in the relation of our ideas to each other, or in the conformity of thofe ideas to external objects; and...