The Works of Edmund BurkeРипол Классик, 1887 |
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Strana v
... confidently offered to the favorable regard of the public from its completeness, its moderate price, and its typographical excellence. ADVERTISEMENT TO THE READER. Tar: late Mr. Burke, from a Advertisement to the present Edition.
... confidently offered to the favorable regard of the public from its completeness, its moderate price, and its typographical excellence. ADVERTISEMENT TO THE READER. Tar: late Mr. Burke, from a Advertisement to the present Edition.
Strana 22
... regard, for one of these; would you not hide that distinction? You would not pray him to compassionate the poor Frenchman, or the unhappy German. Far from it; you would speak of him as a foreigner, an accident to which all are liable ...
... regard, for one of these; would you not hide that distinction? You would not pray him to compassionate the poor Frenchman, or the unhappy German. Far from it; you would speak of him as a foreigner, an accident to which all are liable ...
Strana 26
... regard of a tyrant is as inconstant and capricious as that of a woman; and concluding his time to be short, he makes haste to fill up the measure of his iniquity, in rapine, in luxury, and in revenge. Every avenue to the throne is shut ...
... regard of a tyrant is as inconstant and capricious as that of a woman; and concluding his time to be short, he makes haste to fill up the measure of his iniquity, in rapine, in luxury, and in revenge. Every avenue to the throne is shut ...
Strana 35
... regard the natural rights of mankind, they must appear in reality and truth, no better than pitiful and oppressive oligarchies. After so fair an examen, wherein nothing has been exaggerated; no fact produced which cannot be proved, and ...
... regard the natural rights of mankind, they must appear in reality and truth, no better than pitiful and oppressive oligarchies. After so fair an examen, wherein nothing has been exaggerated; no fact produced which cannot be proved, and ...
Strana 57
... regard ' the Society of the sexes . . . . . . 84 K. Of Beauty . . . . . . 85 XI. Society and Solitude . . . . . 86 III. Sympathy, Imitation, and Ambition . . . . 87 XIII. Sympathy . . . . . . . . ib. XIV. The efl'ects of Sympathy in the ...
... regard ' the Society of the sexes . . . . . . 84 K. Of Beauty . . . . . . 85 XI. Society and Solitude . . . . . 86 III. Sympathy, Imitation, and Ambition . . . . 87 XIII. Sympathy . . . . . . . . ib. XIV. The efl'ects of Sympathy in the ...
Obsah
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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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