The London review, conducted by R. Cumberland, Том 1Richard Cumberland 1809 |
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Страница 85
... moral and intellectual improvement , which , conducive as it is to our happiness , nature meant for man . Who that had a mind to consider , or a soul to choose , would resign freedom , however savage , for the caprice of a tyrant , for ...
... moral and intellectual improvement , which , conducive as it is to our happiness , nature meant for man . Who that had a mind to consider , or a soul to choose , would resign freedom , however savage , for the caprice of a tyrant , for ...
Страница 86
... moral obligation can bind to speak the truth . But the fact is fully solved by the confession that they are Pagans , or at least addicted to the ambiguous rites of Obiah . Nothing is more certain or more lamentable in the state of ...
... moral obligation can bind to speak the truth . But the fact is fully solved by the confession that they are Pagans , or at least addicted to the ambiguous rites of Obiah . Nothing is more certain or more lamentable in the state of ...
Страница 88
... moral susceptibility of the slave , but in a moral light it deserves execration . " By this barbarous and erroneous policy , " says the author , " the wretched slave is dragged from the scene of his enjoyments , " torn from the hallowed ...
... moral susceptibility of the slave , but in a moral light it deserves execration . " By this barbarous and erroneous policy , " says the author , " the wretched slave is dragged from the scene of his enjoyments , " torn from the hallowed ...
Страница 89
... moral responsibility annexed to the enjoyment of it , nature intended for her crea- tures , were there not in the circle of man's civil progression , some compensation for its loss , some atonement , however slight , for its involuntary ...
... moral responsibility annexed to the enjoyment of it , nature intended for her crea- tures , were there not in the circle of man's civil progression , some compensation for its loss , some atonement , however slight , for its involuntary ...
Страница 94
... moral good- ness . In Mrs. Inchbald's remarks on Dryden's All for Love , " this passage occurs : " Who can be inattentive to the loves " of Marc Antony ? ( why not Mark Anthony , if his name " must be Anglicised ? ) Yet , thus described ...
... moral good- ness . In Mrs. Inchbald's remarks on Dryden's All for Love , " this passage occurs : " Who can be inattentive to the loves " of Marc Antony ? ( why not Mark Anthony , if his name " must be Anglicised ? ) Yet , thus described ...
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