Shelley's Prose: Or, The Trumpet of a Prophecy |
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Page 46
... justice ; if you virtue and justice ; if you destroy the one you destroy the other . How- ever ill others may act , this will be no excuse for you if you follow their example ; it ought rather to warn you from pursuing so bad a method ...
... justice ; if you virtue and justice ; if you destroy the one you destroy the other . How- ever ill others may act , this will be no excuse for you if you follow their example ; it ought rather to warn you from pursuing so bad a method ...
Page 47
... justice disapprove . No cause is in itself so dear to liberty as yours . Much depends on you ; far may your efforts efforts spread either hope or despair ; do not then cover in darkness wrongs at which the face of day and the tyrants ...
... justice disapprove . No cause is in itself so dear to liberty as yours . Much depends on you ; far may your efforts efforts spread either hope or despair ; do not then cover in darkness wrongs at which the face of day and the tyrants ...
Page 187
... justice , are correlative with these two por- tions of the only true object of all the volun- tary actions of a human being . Benevolence is the desire to be the author of good , and justice the apprehension of the manner in which good ...
... justice , are correlative with these two por- tions of the only true object of all the volun- tary actions of a human being . Benevolence is the desire to be the author of good , and justice the apprehension of the manner in which good ...
Contents
ESSAYS | 28 |
PROPOSALS FOR AN ASSOCIATION | 169 |
A VINDICATION | 181 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
action Age of Reason animals assert beauty believe benevolence called Catholic Emancipation cause character conception considered contemplation death Defence of Poetry degree Deism deist Deity Devil divine doctrines earth edition effect equal Essay eternal evil existence expression feel fragment genius Godwin Greek habits happiness heart human mind Hume Hume's idea imagination Jesus Christ justice labor Laocoön letter liberty live Lord Ellenborough mankind Mary Shelley ment misery moral nation nature necessity Necessity of Atheism never object opinion pain Paine's paragraph passion Percy Bysshe Shelley perfect person philosophy Plato pleasure poem poet poetry political possess present principles produce prose punishment Queen Mab reason reform Refutation of Deism rendered Roger Ingpen ruin seems sense sentiments Shelley Shelley's Note social society sophisms soul Spinoza spirit superstition suppose sympathy things thought tion Translation true truth tyrants universe virtue words writers