The Works of Edmund BurkeРипол Классик, 1887 |
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Strana 13
... attend the first rage of conquest. It will therefore be very reasonable to allow on their account as much as, added to the losses of the conqueror, may amount to a million of deaths, and then we shall see this conqueror, the oldest we ...
... attend the first rage of conquest. It will therefore be very reasonable to allow on their account as much as, added to the losses of the conqueror, may amount to a million of deaths, and then we shall see this conqueror, the oldest we ...
Strana 14
... attend all wars, and in a quarrel, in which none of the sufl'erers could have the least rational concern. The Babylonian, Assyrian, Median, and Persian, monarchies must have poured out seas of blood in their formation, and in their ...
... attend all wars, and in a quarrel, in which none of the sufl'erers could have the least rational concern. The Babylonian, Assyrian, Median, and Persian, monarchies must have poured out seas of blood in their formation, and in their ...
Strana 18
... attended by an almost entire extirpation of all the former inhabitants. Their own civil wars, and those with their petty neighbors, consumed vast multitudes almost every year for several centuries; and the irruptions of the kings of ...
... attended by an almost entire extirpation of all the former inhabitants. Their own civil wars, and those with their petty neighbors, consumed vast multitudes almost every year for several centuries; and the irruptions of the kings of ...
Strana 20
... attend the wasting of kingdoms, and sacking of cities. But I do not write to the vulgar, nor to that which only governs the vulgar, their passions. I go upon a naked and moderate calculation, just enough, without a pedantical exactness ...
... attend the wasting of kingdoms, and sacking of cities. But I do not write to the vulgar, nor to that which only governs the vulgar, their passions. I go upon a naked and moderate calculation, just enough, without a pedantical exactness ...
Strana 21
... attended with consequences so deplorable. In a tate of nature, it had been impossible to find a number of men, sufficient for such slaughters, agreed in the same bloody purpose; or allowing that they might have come to such an agreement ...
... attended with consequences so deplorable. In a tate of nature, it had been impossible to find a number of men, sufficient for such slaughters, agreed in the same bloody purpose; or allowing that they might have come to such an agreement ...
Obsah
1 | |
55 | |
57 | |
57 | |
59 | |
74 | |
84 | |
Imitation | 91 |
Cause of Pain and Fear | 165 |
How the Sublime is produced | 167 |
Exercise necessary for the finer Organs | 169 |
Why visual objects of great dimensions are Sublime | 170 |
Unity why requisite to Vastness | 171 |
The artificial Infinite | 172 |
The vibrations must be similar | 173 |
The effects of succession in visual objects explained | 174 |
ésssééss | 95 |
The same subject continued | 101 |
Privation | 112 |
Light | 119 |
PART III | 127 |
Beautiful objects small | 148 |
Smoothness | 150 |
Delicacy | 152 |
Beauty in color | 153 |
XVIH Recapitulation ib XIX The Physiognomy | 155 |
Grace | 156 |
Elegance and Speciousness ib XXIV The Beautiful in Feeling | 157 |
Taste and Smell | 160 |
PART IV | 162 |
Association | 164 |
Lockes opinion concerning Darkness considered | 176 |
Darkness terrible in its own nature | 177 |
Why darkness is terrible | 178 |
The effects of Blackness | 181 |
The physical cause of Love | 182 |
Why Smoothness is Beautiful | 183 |
Sweetness its nature | 184 |
Sweetness relaxing | 186 |
Variation why beautiful I | 187 |
PART V | 193 |
Poetry not strictly an imitative Art | 202 |
A Short Account of a late Short Administration | 207 |
theNation 211 | 327 |
Thoughts on the Cause of the Present Discontents | 347 |
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administration advantage America animals appear arises attended beauty become believe body carried cause colonies common concerning consequences considerable considered constitution continued court danger darkness debt depend duties effect efl'ect England equal establishment export feeling find first force France frequently friends give given greater hand idea images imagination import increase interest kind laws least less light look manner matter means measures mind ministers nature necessary never object observed operation opinion original pain parliament particular passions peace perhaps persons pleased pleasure political positive present principles produce proportion qualities raised reason regard repeal represent seems sense sort species spirit stand strength strong sublime suppose sure taste terror things thought tion trade true whilst whole