The Works of Samuel Parr ...: With Memoirs of His Life and Writings, and a Selection from His Correspondence, Том 4Longman, Rees, 1828 |
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... sense , and virtue , to whose esteem Mr. Fox , if he were living , would not be indifferent , and to whose judgment therefore is more particu- larly addressed the vindication of Mr. Fox's princi- ples from the severe charges brought ...
... sense , and virtue , to whose esteem Mr. Fox , if he were living , would not be indifferent , and to whose judgment therefore is more particu- larly addressed the vindication of Mr. Fox's princi- ples from the severe charges brought ...
Страница 14
... sense you entertain of all his amiable and all his venerable qualities , accompanied perhaps by transient and involuntary illusions of his momentary presence among us , may suspend or mitigate your sorrow . lot as The pleasure I have ...
... sense you entertain of all his amiable and all his venerable qualities , accompanied perhaps by transient and involuntary illusions of his momentary presence among us , may suspend or mitigate your sorrow . lot as The pleasure I have ...
Страница 15
... sense ; always adapting his matter to the subject , and his diction to the matter ; never mis- representing where he undertook only to confute , nor insulting because he had vanquished ; instruc- tive without a wish to deceive , and ...
... sense ; always adapting his matter to the subject , and his diction to the matter ; never mis- representing where he undertook only to confute , nor insulting because he had vanquished ; instruc- tive without a wish to deceive , and ...
Страница 22
... sense than he could hold . " He never " took more corn than he could make into meal . " " The prospects he opened were wide , but never so distant as to be indistinct . " His exertions , when the importance of the sub- ject , or the ...
... sense than he could hold . " He never " took more corn than he could make into meal . " " The prospects he opened were wide , but never so distant as to be indistinct . " His exertions , when the importance of the sub- ject , or the ...
Страница 23
... sense led him to acquiesce in them when they were found . In examining the opinions of others he followed the strictest process of the analytic method ; and every step which he took brought his hearers farther from obscurity or nearer ...
... sense led him to acquiesce in them when they were found . In examining the opinions of others he followed the strictest process of the analytic method ; and every step which he took brought his hearers farther from obscurity or nearer ...
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accused Æneid ANNO SACRO authority Bishop Burke capital punishments chap character Christian Church of England Church of Rome Cicero circumstances civil common condemned crimes criminal dear Sir death Demosthenes duty ecclesiastics EDMOND MALONE effect employed endeavoured English epitaph etiam evil favour fear guilty honour human Hume imputed infanticide inflicted innocent inscription James Johnson judge judgment judicious justice King language laws learned legislator less liberty Livy MDCCC ment mind Montesquieu moral never observation occasion offence opinion orator Paley Parliament PARR passage penal code penal laws persons Plutarch political Popery prejudices principles Protestant Protestantism punishment quæ quam Quintilian quod reason reign religion religious Roman Catholics says sense sincere Sir William Jones sovereign spirit statute suffer supposed Tacitus tion truth wish words writer δὲ ἐν καὶ μὲν τὴν τῆς τὸ τοῦ τῶν