| Junius - Great Britain - 1791 - 416 pages
...performance deep, folid, and ingenious. ,m* " IN fhort, whoever confiders what it is that con" ftitutes the moving principle of what we call great " affairs, and the invincible (cnfibility of man to the " opinion of his fellow-creatures, will not hefitate " to affirm, that if... | |
| Junius - English letters - 1797 - 354 pages
...performance deep, solid, and ingenious. ' In short, whoever considers what it is that con' stitutes the moving principle of what we call great ' affairs, and the invincible sensibility of man to the ' opinion of his fellow-creatures, will not hesitate ' to affirm, that, if... | |
| Junius - Great Britain - 1804 - 472 pages
...performance, deep, solid, and ingenious. " In short, whoever considers what it is that constitutes the moving principle of what we call great affairs, and the invincible sensibility of man to the opinion of his fellow-creatures, will not hesitate to affirm that, if it... | |
| Junius - Great Britain - 1804 - 494 pages
...performance, deep, solid, and ingenious. " IN short, whoever considers what it is that " constitutes the moving principle of what we call " great affairs, and the invincible sensibility of man " to the opinion of his fellow-creatures, will not " hesitate to affirm that, if... | |
| Junius - Great Britain - 1805 - 320 pages
...performance deep, solid, and ingenious. ' In short, whoever considers what it is that ' constitutes the moving principle of what we call ' great affairs, and the invincible sensibility of man ' to the opinion of his fellow-creatures, will not he' sitate to affirm, that, if... | |
| Junius (pseud.) - 1806 - 320 pages
...performance deep, solid, and ingenious. " In short, whoever considers what it is that " constitutes the moving principle of what we " call great affairs, and the invincible sensibility " of man to the opinion of his fellow-creatures, " will not hesitate to affirm, that if... | |
| Junius - English letters - 1812 - 618 pages
...performance, deep, solid and ingenious. " In short, whoever considers what it is, that constitutes the moving principle of what we call great affairs, and the invincible sensibility of man to the opinion of his fellow-creatures, will not hesitate to affirm that, if it... | |
| Junius - Great Britain - 1813 - 530 pages
...performance, deep, solid and ingenious. " In short, whoever considers what it is, that constitutes the moving principle of what we call great affairs, and the invincible sensibility of man to the opinion of his fellow creatures, will not hesitate to affirm that, if it... | |
| Jean Louis de Lolme - Constitutional history - 1816 - 602 pages
...labours, nothing but mortification and disgust. In short, whoever considers what it is that constitutes the moving principle of what we call great affairs, and the invincible sensibility of man to the opinion of his fellow-creatures, will not hesitate to affirm, that if it... | |
| British prose literature - 1821 - 444 pages
...labours, nothing but mortification and disgust. In short, whoever considers what it is that constitutes the moving principle of what we call great affairs, and the invincible sensibility of man to the opinion of his fellow-creatures, will not hesitate to affirm, that if it... | |
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