| Antislavery movements - 1833 - 370 pages
...sdjxrior man as they are blended, iu his attractive character, with all the softness and simplicity of a child; no human being was ever more free from any taint of malignity, vanity, and falsehood." From these qualities of his public and private character, it probably arose, that no... | |
| Sir James Mackintosh - Great Britain - 1834 - 402 pages
...superior man, as they arc blended, in his attractive character, with all the softness and simplicity of a child : no human being was ever more free from any taint of malignity, vanity, or falsehood.' " The measures which he supported or opposed may divide the opinion of posterity, as they have divided... | |
| sir James Mackintosh - 1834 - 394 pages
...superior man, as they are blended, in his attractive character, with all the softness and simplicity of a child ; no human being was ever more free from any taint of malignity, vanity, or falsehood.' " The measures which he supported or opposed may divide the opinion of posterity, as they have divided... | |
| James Machintosh - 1884 - 310 pages
...superior man, as they are blended, in his attractive character, with all the softness and simplicity of a child : no human being was ever more free from any taint of malignity, vanity, or falsehood.5 " The measures which he supported or opposed may divide the opinion of posterity ,~as they... | |
| England - 1835 - 802 pages
...superior man, as they were blended in his attractive character with all the softness and simplicity of a child. No human being was ever more free from any...and private character, it probably arose, that no English statesman ever preserved, during so long a period of adverse fortune, so many affectionate... | |
| sir James Mackintosh - 1835 - 552 pages
...superior man, as they were blended in his attractive character with all the softness and simplicity of a child. No human being was ever more free from any...and private character, it probably arose, that no English statesman ever preserved, during so long a period of adverse fortune, so many affectionate... | |
| Sir James Mackintosh - British - 1836 - 526 pages
...superior man, as they were blended in his attractive character with all the softness and simplicity of a child. No human being was ever more free from any...and private character, it probably arose, that no English statesman ever preserved, during so long a period of adverse fortune, so many affectionate... | |
| Englishmen - 1836 - 258 pages
...superior man, as they are blended, in his attractive character, with all the softness and simplicity of a child : no human being was ever more free from any taint of malignity, vanity, or falsehood.' The measures which he supported or opposed may divide the opinion of posterity, as they have divided... | |
| James Stamford Caldwell - Literature and morals - 1843 - 372 pages
...superior man, as they were blended in his attractive character with all the softness and simplicity of a child. No human being was ever more free from any taint of malignity, vanity, or falsehood." And observes Burke : " To be sure, Fox was a man made to be loved!" No man less needed auxiliaries... | |
| Edward Shepherd Creasy - Eton College - 1850 - 532 pages
...superior man as they are blended, in his attractive character, with all the softness and simplicity of a child : no human being was ever more free from any taint of malignity, vanity, or falsehood." The speeches of Fox, as we possess them, do not contain full evidence of the high oratorical powers... | |
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