The Works of the Late Right Honourable Henry St. John, Lord Viscount Bolingbroke, 第 4 巻J. Johnson, 1809 |
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absurd advantage allies ambition ancient appear atheist authority beginning believe Britain cause character Charles the second conduct conjuncture constitution continued corruption county of Burgundy court crown debts divine Dutch effect emperor empire employed endeavour engagements England and Holland eternity Europe fact faction favour former French grand alliance honour house of Austria house of Bourbon interest king of France king of Spain king William latter least Lewis the fourteenth liberty lord lordship Low Countries maintain mankind means measures ment ministers nation nature necessary obliged occasion opinion oppose particular party Patriot King peace Philip philosophers power of France preserved pretence prince principles publick queen racter reason reign soon Spaniards Spanish monarchy spirit Strabo strength succession sufficient superiour things thought thousand seven hundred thousand six hundred throne tion tradition treaties of Westphalia treaty treaty of Utrecht true truth wherein whigs whole wise
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280 ページ - ... put himself at the head of his people in order to govern, or more properly to subdue, all parties.
185 ページ - I say, it seems to me, that the Author of nature has thought fit to mingle, from time to time, among the societies of men, a few, and but a few, of those on whom he is graciously pleased to bestow a larger proportion of the ethereal spirit, than is given in the ordinary course of his providence to the sons of men.
328 ページ - What spectacle can be presented to the view of the mind so rare, so nearly divine, as a king possessed of absolute power, neither usurped by fraud nor maintained by force, but the genuine effect of esteem, of confidence, and affection? the free gift of liberty, who finds her greatest security in this power, and would desire no other if the prince on the throne could be what his people wish him to be — immortal. Of such a prince...
323 ページ - Though a woman, she hid all that was womanish about her: and, if a few equivocal marks of coquetry appeared on some occasions, they passed like flashes of lightning, vanished as soon as they were discerned, and imprinted no blot on her character. She had private friendships, she had favourites ; but she never suffered her friends to forget she was their queen ; and when her favourites did, she made them feel that she was so.
58 ページ - I said above remained to be done, and if the Emperor put it out of our power to do another of them with advantage ; were we to put it still more out of our power, and to wait unarmed for the death of the king of Spain ? In fine, if we had not the prospect of disputing with France, so successfully as we might have had it, the Spanish succession, whenever it should be open ; were we not only to show by disarming, that we would not dispute it at all, but to censure likewise the second of the three things...
259 ページ - Liberty is to the collective body "what health is to every individual body. Without health no pleasure can be tasted by man : without liberty no happiness can be enjoyed by society.
346 ページ - Let me therefore conclude by repeating, that division has caused all the mischief we lament ; that union alone can retrieve it; and that a great advance towards this union, was the coalition of parties, so happily begun, so successfully carried on, and of late so unaccountably neglected ; to say no worse.
270 ページ - A new people will seem to arise with a new king. Innumerable metamorphoses, like those which poets feign, will happen in very deed ; and while men are conscious that they are the same individuals, the difference of their sentiments will almost persuade them that they are changed into different beings.
284 ページ - On the contrary, he will distinguish the voice of his people from the clamour of a faction, and will hearken to it. He will redress grievances, correct errors, and reform or punish ministers. This he will do as a good prince ; and as a wise...
212 ページ - 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.
