Moral & Political Truth: Or Reflections Suggested by Reading History and Biographyauthor, 1811 - 401 |
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Strona 16
... commit them . So in the present case , I have done no more than appeared to me to be useful . I have made no personal allusions : and if any of my remarks should be applicable to the conduct , and therefore injurious to the feelings of ...
... commit them . So in the present case , I have done no more than appeared to me to be useful . I have made no personal allusions : and if any of my remarks should be applicable to the conduct , and therefore injurious to the feelings of ...
Strona 59
... hope to shun their rage ? If , by their wrath , their nearest kindred fall , On kings for mercy , ' tis in vain to call . An act , which others would be shock'd to hear , A prince commits without a sigh or tear : Thus ( 59 )
... hope to shun their rage ? If , by their wrath , their nearest kindred fall , On kings for mercy , ' tis in vain to call . An act , which others would be shock'd to hear , A prince commits without a sigh or tear : Thus ( 59 )
Strona 60
Or Reflections Suggested by Reading History and Biography Jacob Franklin Heston. A prince commits without a sigh or tear : Thus mean Caracalla , with vile desire , Unsheath'd his sword , to slay his aged sire . With stealthy pace , he ...
Or Reflections Suggested by Reading History and Biography Jacob Franklin Heston. A prince commits without a sigh or tear : Thus mean Caracalla , with vile desire , Unsheath'd his sword , to slay his aged sire . With stealthy pace , he ...
Strona 63
... commit no wrong , nor barter peace , To make their troubles , fears , and wants increase : But love their cottage more than public halls , And rest in quiet , till their country calls . To serve their country , they would not refuse ...
... commit no wrong , nor barter peace , To make their troubles , fears , and wants increase : But love their cottage more than public halls , And rest in quiet , till their country calls . To serve their country , they would not refuse ...
Strona 66
... commit , or else approve those deeds , From which the subject's loss or woe proceeds ; But they alone , around the king appear : The poorer subject he disdains to hear . He sits , enthron'd amidst his noble slaves , And forms a cone of ...
... commit , or else approve those deeds , From which the subject's loss or woe proceeds ; But they alone , around the king appear : The poorer subject he disdains to hear . He sits , enthron'd amidst his noble slaves , And forms a cone of ...
Inne wydania - Wyświetl wszystko
Moral and Political Truth: Or Reflections Suggested by Reading History and ... Jacob Franklin Heston Podgląd niedostępny - 2017 |
Moral and Political Truth: Or Reflections Suggested by Reading History and ... Jacob Franklin Heston Podgląd niedostępny - 2018 |
Moral & Political Truth: Or Reflections Suggested by Reading History and ... Jacob Franklin Heston Podgląd niedostępny - 2016 |
Kluczowe wyrazy i wyrażenia
actuated adicted anarchy appear barbarous believe blood Cæsar Caligula called Caracalla cause Charles II Chief Justice Coke commit Consequently constitution corrupt crimes cruel cruelty deeds democracy derive despotism destroy dreadful duty emperor employed endeavour enemies equal ev'ry evil executed exist fear feel fight foes folly fools forc'd freedom friends give greatest guilty happiness Hence Henry VII honour human injurious instance Julius Cæsar justice justly killed kind king knaves labour laws least less liberty lives mankind means ment mind Mithridates monarchists monarchs monster murder nation nature Nero never NOTE obtain offence opinions oppression pain peace perhaps persons possess pow'r priests princes produce proof prove punishment reason receive reign rich royal royalists savage sects shew slaves spirit suppose throne tion toil torture trial by ordeal truth tyrants unjust vex'd vicious virtue Vitellius wealth wish woes wrong
Popularne fragmenty
Strona 3 - If there be any among us who would wish to dissolve this union, or to change its republican form, let them stand undisturbed as monuments of the safety with which error of opinion may be tolerated, where reason is left free to combat it.
Strona 311 - Cat/iolicce, and against Luther, who had just begun the Reformation in Germany, upon which the pope gave him the title of Defender of the Faith, a title still retained by the monarcbs of Great Britain: the bull conferring it bears date Oct.
Strona 194 - Turner called to the sheriff's men to bring Mr. Peters to see what was doing ; which being done, the executioner came to him, and rubbing his bloody hands together, asked him how he liked that work. He told him he was not at all terrified, and that he might do his worst, and when he was...
Strona 193 - King to the bar, it had been treason in them ; and as to the part he had in the action with which he was charged, he was so far from repenting what he had done, that he was most ready to seal it with his blood...
Strona 210 - On the twenty-eighth day of March he was conducted, amidst a vast concourse of the populace, to the Greve, the common place of execution, stripped naked, and fastened to the scaffold by iron gyves. One of his hands was then burnt in liquid flaming sulphur; his thighs, legs, and arms, were torn with...
Strona 273 - He applied the golden rule of " doing to others as he would that others should do unto him," which for the present put an end to the discussion.
Strona 245 - ... the Diversions of Purley," first published in octavo in 1786. The work was afterwards enlarged into two volumes quarto, but never completed. In the introduction, the author, with reference to his own political opinions, has humorously alluded to Purley having been once the seat of Bradshaw, President of the High Court of Justice at the trial of Charles I. Respecting the contents of this work, the critical " doctors " of the time did decidedly differ, and a tractable but weak-minded reader must...
Strona 193 - ... their detestation of such usage. At the place of execution, among other things, he declared that he had used the utmost of his endeavours that the practice of the law might be regulated, and that the...
Strona 188 - ... death, by refusing her sustenance, under pretence of its being prejudicial to her health. But he soon saw the futility of relying upon such vain prognostications ; for his soldiers, by their cruelty and rapine, having become insupportable to the inhabitants of Rome...