Elegant Extracts, Or, Useful and Entertaining Passages from the Best English Authors and Translations: Principally Designed for the Use of Young Persons, Volume 2S. Walker, 1826 - English letters |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 87
Page 4
Principally Designed for the Use of Young Persons. What a situation must the poor is a tranquillity of mind , arising from the opinion each person has of his subject be in under those republics ! safety . In order to have this liberty ...
Principally Designed for the Use of Young Persons. What a situation must the poor is a tranquillity of mind , arising from the opinion each person has of his subject be in under those republics ! safety . In order to have this liberty ...
Page 8
... person , nor of course the conduct , blind in another , might in some cases of him who is intrusted with the ex- be too severe . But as we have al- ecutive power . His person should ready observed , the national judges be sacred ...
... person , nor of course the conduct , blind in another , might in some cases of him who is intrusted with the ex- be too severe . But as we have al- ecutive power . His person should ready observed , the national judges be sacred ...
Page 57
Principally Designed for the Use of Young Persons. ing the person they sought for , and preferments , he was upon this ac- suspecting that he must have taken count considered as a new man , and his flight again to the sea , they pur ...
Principally Designed for the Use of Young Persons. ing the person they sought for , and preferments , he was upon this ac- suspecting that he must have taken count considered as a new man , and his flight again to the sea , they pur ...
Contents
On the Constitution of England Montesquieu | 3 |
Necessity of the Union | 23 |
The Feudal System | 30 |
32 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
admiration affection America appear army Athenians battle body Cæsar called Catiline cendant character Chesterfield Cicero civil conduct crown danger death enemies England equally eyes father favour fortune France French friends gentlemen give Greece hand happiness hath heart Henry Henry VIII honour hope human Hyder Ali Iago justice kind king kingdom lence less liberty live lord manner means ment mind ministers nation nature neral never noble obliged occasion opinion parliament passion peace person pleasure Pliny the Elder Pliny the Younger poet political Pompey possessed prince principles racter reign Rienzi Roman Rome Scotland seemed sion slaves Spain speak spect spirit temper thee ther thing thou thought throne tion truth tural ture uncle Toby vices vigour virtue whole word