The Eclectic review. vol. 1-New [8th]1832 |
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... Common Sense ' is endeavouring to draw his reader into a concession that may render him the more easily beguiled and en- tangled by the sophisms it is designed to introduce . But , al- though thus opposite in their spirit , both ...
... Common Sense ' is endeavouring to draw his reader into a concession that may render him the more easily beguiled and en- tangled by the sophisms it is designed to introduce . But , al- though thus opposite in their spirit , both ...
8 ページ
... common sense is competent to form an opinion , at the first glance , on such points , without either having made them the subject of regular study , or conceiving that any such is requisite , it would follow that the art of government ...
... common sense is competent to form an opinion , at the first glance , on such points , without either having made them the subject of regular study , or conceiving that any such is requisite , it would follow that the art of government ...
17 ページ
... common domestic offices ; and when they marry , are wholly dependent on such as they hire for those purposes ; so that a fall of wages , or want of work , reduces their families to a state of much greater dis- comfort than others , with ...
... common domestic offices ; and when they marry , are wholly dependent on such as they hire for those purposes ; so that a fall of wages , or want of work , reduces their families to a state of much greater dis- comfort than others , with ...
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... common stock , and causes a hundred poor families the less to be maintained ; —and that a general spoliation of the rich , and equal division of property , would put an end to poverty for ever ? ' — p . 217 . For the purpose of ...
... common stock , and causes a hundred poor families the less to be maintained ; —and that a general spoliation of the rich , and equal division of property , would put an end to poverty for ever ? ' — p . 217 . For the purpose of ...
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... common advantages , these public means of society , offering so many important agents to the individual for the gratifica- tion of his wants , alone are worth more to him than all the precarious power of the savage state , -how ...
... common advantages , these public means of society , offering so many important agents to the individual for the gratifica- tion of his wants , alone are worth more to him than all the precarious power of the savage state , -how ...
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人気のある引用
6 ページ - Government, like dress, is the badge of lost innocence: the palaces of kings are built on the ruins of the bowers of paradise.
13 ページ - The man whose whole life is spent in performing a few simple operations, of which the effects too are, perhaps, always the same or very nearly the same, has no occasion to exert his understanding, or to exercise his invention in finding expedients for removing difficulties which never occur.
38 ページ - Let your women keep silence in the churches : for it is not permitted unto them to speak ; but they are commanded to be under obedience, as also saith the law.
540 ページ - The Lord of all, himself through all diffused, Sustains, and is the life of all that lives. Nature is but a name for an effect, Whose cause is God.
52 ページ - God by the weak pinions of our reason, but he has been pleased to descend to us , and what Socrates said of him, what Plato writ, and the rest of the Heathen philosophers of several nations, is all no more than the twilight of revelation, after the sun of it was set in the race of Noah.
219 ページ - It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle, than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of God.
192 ページ - Himself, as conscious of his awful charge, And anxious mainly that the flock he feeds May feel it too. Affectionate in look, And tender in address, as well becomes A messenger of grace to guilty men.
209 ページ - ... and one even put on a military cockade, in order to incite his parishioners to come forward in the public cause. The genuine principles of our admirable constitution were thought by many to be in imminent peril ; yet all who wrote in their defence were exposed to obloquy. A learned prelate asserted, in the House of Lords, that " the people had nothing to do with " the laws but to obey them," and his sentiment was loudly applauded.
348 ページ - Lord, I thank thee that I am not as other men are, or even as this publican.
245 ページ - We have thought fit, by, and with, the Advice of our Privy Council, to...