The Works of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke, Volume 1 |
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Page v
... regard the Society of the Sexes 76 x . Of Beauty . 77 XI . Society and Solitude 78 XII . Sympathy , Imitation , and Ambition ib . XIII . Sympathy 79 XIV . The Effects of Sympathy in the Distresses of others xv . Of the Effects of ...
... regard the Society of the Sexes 76 x . Of Beauty . 77 XI . Society and Solitude 78 XII . Sympathy , Imitation , and Ambition ib . XIII . Sympathy 79 XIV . The Effects of Sympathy in the Distresses of others xv . Of the Effects of ...
Page vi
... regard to the Passions 90 [ Iv . ] The same subject continued 91 v . Power 94 VI . Privation 99 VII . Vastness 100 VIII . Infinity 101 IX . Succession and Uniformity 102 • x . Magnitude in Building 103 XI . Infinity in pleasing Objects ...
... regard to the Passions 90 [ Iv . ] The same subject continued 91 v . Power 94 VI . Privation 99 VII . Vastness 100 VIII . Infinity 101 IX . Succession and Uniformity 102 • x . Magnitude in Building 103 XI . Infinity in pleasing Objects ...
Page 20
... 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 23
... regard of a tyrant is as inconstant 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 inconstant 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 32
... regard the natural rights of mankind , they must appear , in reality and truth , no better than pitiful and oppressive oligarchies . After so fair an examen , wherein nothing has been exag- gerated ; no fact produced which cannot be ...
... regard the natural rights of mankind , they must appear , in reality and truth , no better than pitiful and oppressive oligarchies . After so fair an examen , wherein nothing has been exag- gerated ; no fact produced which cannot be ...
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