The Works of Edmund BurkeРипол Классик, 1887 |
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Strana 5
... becomes the sober aspect of truth. I have met with a quotation in Lord Coke's reports that pleased me very much, though I do not know from whence .he has taken it: “ Interdmnfucata falsiras, (says he) in multis est probabilior, at swpe ...
... becomes the sober aspect of truth. I have met with a quotation in Lord Coke's reports that pleased me very much, though I do not know from whence .he has taken it: “ Interdmnfucata falsiras, (says he) in multis est probabilior, at swpe ...
Strana 6
... become of the world, if the practice of all moral duties, and the foundations of society, rested upon having their reasons made clear and demonstrative to every individual '2 The editor knows that the subject of this letter is not so ...
... become of the world, if the practice of all moral duties, and the foundations of society, rested upon having their reasons made clear and demonstrative to every individual '2 The editor knows that the subject of this letter is not so ...
Strana 18
... become at several times extremely populous, and to supply men for slaughters scarcely credible, if other well-known and wellattested ones had not given them a color. The first settling of the Jews here, was attended by an almost entire ...
... become at several times extremely populous, and to supply men for slaughters scarcely credible, if other well-known and wellattested ones had not given them a color. The first settling of the Jews here, was attended by an almost entire ...
Strana 24
... becomes the most foolish and capricious thing, at the same time that it is the most terrible and destructive, that well can be conceived. 'In a despotism the principal person finds, that let the want, misery, and indigence of his ...
... becomes the most foolish and capricious thing, at the same time that it is the most terrible and destructive, that well can be conceived. 'In a despotism the principal person finds, that let the want, misery, and indigence of his ...
Strana 25
... become victims of his suspicions. The slightest displeasure is death; and a disagreeable aspect is often as great a crime as high treason. In the court of Nero, a person of learning, of unquestioned merit, and of unsuspected loyalty ...
... become victims of his suspicions. The slightest displeasure is death; and a disagreeable aspect is often as great a crime as high treason. In the court of Nero, a person of learning, of unquestioned merit, and of unsuspected loyalty ...
Obsah
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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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