The Works of Lord Bolingbroke: With a Life, Prepared Expressly for this Edition, Containing Additional Information Relative to His Personal and Public Character, Tom 2Carey and Hart, 1841 |
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Strona 11
... of faction . This attempt , therefore , ought to have your approbation . To dedi- cate it to you may be construed to suppose that it will have your approbation : and he , who supposes that it will A DISSERTATION UPON PARTIES . 11.
... of faction . This attempt , therefore , ought to have your approbation . To dedi- cate it to you may be construed to suppose that it will have your approbation : and he , who supposes that it will A DISSERTATION UPON PARTIES . 11.
Strona 19
... suppose that the reins of government would grow weaker in his majesty's hand , if you was out of power , or out of the world . In short , sir , you may pass , and I believe you do pass justly , for a man of extreme good parts , and for ...
... suppose that the reins of government would grow weaker in his majesty's hand , if you was out of power , or out of the world . In short , sir , you may pass , and I believe you do pass justly , for a man of extreme good parts , and for ...
Strona 20
... suppose that the resolution was taken to follow the generous and equitable advice of the pamphlet - writer , who thinks he ought to be proceeded against in a peculiar manner . Let us even suppose that we lived in an age , when ...
... suppose that the resolution was taken to follow the generous and equitable advice of the pamphlet - writer , who thinks he ought to be proceeded against in a peculiar manner . Let us even suppose that we lived in an age , when ...
Strona 87
... suppose , among us , they cannot expect , if they are in their senses , a national concurrence : and surely a little reflection will serve to show them , that the same reasons which make them weaker now than they were some years ago ...
... suppose , among us , they cannot expect , if they are in their senses , a national concurrence : and surely a little reflection will serve to show them , that the same reasons which make them weaker now than they were some years ago ...
Strona 91
... suppose , though I speak of a remote time , and such an one as we ought to hope will never come , that our national circumstances will be just the same as they are now , and our constitution as A DISSERTATION UPON PARTIES . 91.
... suppose , though I speak of a remote time , and such an one as we ought to hope will never come , that our national circumstances will be just the same as they are now , and our constitution as A DISSERTATION UPON PARTIES . 91.
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Strona 222 - God loves from whole to parts : but human soul Must rise from individual to the whole. Self-love but serves the virtuous mind to wake, As the small pebble stirs the peaceful lake ; The centre mov'd, a circle straight succeeds, Another still, and still another spreads ; Friend, parent, neighbour, first it will embrace ; His country next, and next all human race ; Wide and more wide, th...
Strona 429 - He must be seen subdued, bound, chained, and deprived entirely of power to do hurt. In his place, concord will appear, brooding peace and prosperity on the happy land ; joy sitting in every face, content in every heart ; a people unoppressed, undisturbed, unalarmed ; busy to improve their private property and the public stock; fleets covering the ocean, bringing home wealth by the returns of industry, carrying assistance or terror abroad by the direction of wisdom, and asserting triumphantly the...
Strona 234 - But there have been lawyers that were orators, philosophers, historians: there have been Bacons and Clarendons. There will be none such any more, till in some better age true ambition, or the love of fame, prevails over avarice; and till men find leisure and encouragement to prepare themselves for the exercise of this profession, by climbing up to the vantage ground...
Strona 177 - The true and proper object of this application is a constant improvement in private and in public virtue. An application to any study, that tends neither directly nor indirectly to make us better men and better citizens, is at best but a specious and ingenious sort of idleness, to use an expression of Tillotson : and the knowledge we acquire by it is a creditable kind of ignorance, nothing more.
Strona 397 - ... of their fall. Under him, they will not only cease to do evil, but learn to do well ; for by rendering public virtue and real capacity the sole means of acquiring any degree of power or profit in the state, he will set the passions of their hearts on the side of liberty and good government. A Patriot King is the most powerful of all reformers ; for he is himself a sort of standing miracle, so rarely seen and so little understood, that the sure effects of his appearance will be admiration and...
Strona 363 - The destruction of the minister was pursued only as a preliminary, but of essential and indisputable necessity, to that end: but when his destruction seemed to approach, the object of his succession interposed to the sight of many, and the reformation of the government was no longer their point of view.
Strona 240 - Sixtus the fourth was, if I mistake not, a great collector of books at least.
Strona 188 - I say, foresaw how the multiplication of taxes, and the creation of funds, would increase yearly the power of the crown, and bring our liberties by a natural and necessary progression, into a more real, though less apparent danger, than they were in before the revolution; a due reflection on the experience of other ages and countries, would have pointed out national corruption as the natural and necessary consequence of investing the crown with the management of so vast a revenue; and also, the loss...
Strona 88 - By constitution we mean, whenever we speak with propriety and exactness, that assemblage of laws, institutions, and customs, derived from certain fixed principles of reason, directed to certain fixed objects of public good, that compose the general system, according to which the community hath agreed to be governed.
Strona 366 - Eloquence has charms to lead mankind, and gives a nobler superiority than power, that every dunce may use, or fraud, that every knave may employ. But eloquence must flow like a stream that is fed by an abundant spring, and not spout forth a little frothy water on some gaudy day, and remain dry the rest of the year.