Letters on the Study and Use of History: On Exile ; the Spirit of Patriotism ; Idea of a Patriot King ; State of Parties in 1714Alexander Murray, 1870 - 280 pages |
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Page 2
... mean are those who read to talk , to shine in conversation , and to impose in company : who , having few ideas to vend ... means as God has given them to acquire it : and Littleton exerted all the genius he had when he made a dictionary ...
... mean are those who read to talk , to shine in conversation , and to impose in company : who , having few ideas to vend ... means as God has given them to acquire it : and Littleton exerted all the genius he had when he made a dictionary ...
Page 4
... means of gratifying it ; but let us observe that the same principle of nature directs us as strongly , and more generally as well as more early , to indulge our own curiosity , instead of preparing to gratify that of others . The child ...
... means of gratifying it ; but let us observe that the same principle of nature directs us as strongly , and more generally as well as more early , to indulge our own curiosity , instead of preparing to gratify that of others . The child ...
Page 5
... means , and we are obliged to apply to ourselves what we see happen to other men . Instructions by precept have the further disadvantage of coming on the authority of others , and frequently require a long deduction of reasoning ...
... means , and we are obliged to apply to ourselves what we see happen to other men . Instructions by precept have the further disadvantage of coming on the authority of others , and frequently require a long deduction of reasoning ...
Page 7
... were effected by very natural means , by such as it is in every man's power to employ ) ' partim percontando à peritis , partim in rebus gestis 8 LESSONS IN HISTORY FROM THAT OF ROME . ' BOLINGBROKE ON THE STUDY OF HISTORY . 7.
... were effected by very natural means , by such as it is in every man's power to employ ) ' partim percontando à peritis , partim in rebus gestis 8 LESSONS IN HISTORY FROM THAT OF ROME . ' BOLINGBROKE ON THE STUDY OF HISTORY . 7.
Page 16
... means in our ' power , and history furnishes us with these . How we are to improve and apply these means , as well as how we are to acquire them , shall be deduced more particularly in another letter . LETTER III ON THE STUDY OF HISTORY ...
... means in our ' power , and history furnishes us with these . How we are to improve and apply these means , as well as how we are to acquire them , shall be deduced more particularly in another letter . LETTER III ON THE STUDY OF HISTORY ...
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Letters on the Study and Use of History; On Exile; The Spirit of Patriotism ... Henry St John Bolingbroke No preview available - 2015 |
Common terms and phrases
acquire Acusilaus advantage alliance allies ambition ancient appear army authority better Britain Cæsar cause character Charles Charles II Cicero Cilicia conduct conquest consequences constitution corruption crown death Dutch effect emperor empire employed endeavour engaged England Europe example experience faction favour former France French Henry VII honour house of Austria house of Bourbon human improve interest King of France King of Spain least Lewis XIV liberty Livy lord lordship Low Countries Lucullus mankind manner means mind ministers monarchy nation nature necessary object obliged observe occasion oppose ourselves particular party passions Patriot King peace Philip political Polybius pretence prince principles queen reason reign Roman Rome society soon Spaniards Spanish Spanish monarchy spirit study of history subjects success things throne tion treaties of Westphalia treaty treaty of Ryswick true truth virtue whigs whilst whole wise
Popular passages
Page 33 - Self-love but serves the virtuous mind to wake, As the small pebble stirs the peaceful lake; The centre moved, a circle straight succeeds, Another still, and still another spreads; Friend, parent, neighbour, first it will embrace; His country next; and next all human race...
Page 151 - The same azure vault, bespangled with stars, will be everywhere spread over our heads. There is no part of the world from whence we may not admire those planets which roll, like ours, in different orbits round the same central sun ; from whence we may not discover an object still more stupendous, that army of fixed stars hung up in the immense space...
Page 228 - ... this decency, this grace, this propriety of manners to character, is so essential to princes in particular, that whenever it is neglected their virtues lose a great degree of lustre, and their defects acquire much aggravation. Nay more; by neglecting this decency and this grace, and for want of a sufficient regard to appearances, even their virtues may betray them into failings, their failings into vices, and their vices into habits unworthy of princes and unworthy of men.
Page 165 - ... accompanies them, and enlightens even the obscurity of their retreat. If they take a part in public life, the effect is never indifferent. They either appear like ministers of divine vengeance, and their course through the world is marked by desolation and oppression, by poverty and servitude: or they are the guardian angels of the country they inhabit, busy to avert even the most distant evil, and to maintain or to procure peace, plenty, and the greatest of human blessings, liberty.
Page 199 - Liberty is to the collective body, what health is to every individual body. Without health no pleasure can be tasted by man : without liberty no happiness can be enjoyed by society.
Page 147 - I placed so, that she might snatch them away without giving me any disturbance. I kept a great interval between me and them. She took them, but she could not tear them from me. No man suffers by bad fortune, but he who has been deceived by good. If we grow fond of her gifts, fancy that they belong to us, and are perpetually to remain with us, if we lean upon them, and expect to be considered for them; we shall sink into all the bitterness of grief, as soon as these false and transitory benefits pass...
Page 67 - The dominion of the emperor being less supportable than that of the Turks, this unhappy people opened a door to the latter to infest the empire, instead of making their country what it had been before, a barrier against the Ottoman power. France became a sure, though secret ally of the Turks, as well as the Hungarians, and has found her account in it, by keeping the emperor in perpetual alarms on that side, while she has ravaged the empire and the Low Countries on the other.
Page 32 - To what purpose sh uld he husband his time, or learn architecture ? he has no design to build. But then to what purpose all these quarries of stone, all these mountains of sand and lime, all these forests of oak and deal ? ' Magno impendio temporum, magna alienarum aurium molestia, ' laudatio haec constat, O hominem litteratum ! Simus hoc titulo 'rusticiore contenti, O virum bonum...
Page 8 - Now, nothing can contribute more to prevent us from being tainted with this vanity than to accustom ourselves early to contemplate the different nations of the earth in that vast map which history spreads before us, in their rise and their fall, in their barbarous and civilised states, in the likeness and unlikeness of them all to one another, and of each to itself.
Page 13 - Your lordship sees, not only how much a due reflection upon the experience of other ages and countries would have pointed out national corruption, as the natural and necessary consequence of investing the crown with the management of so great a revenue ; but also the loss of liberty, as the natural and necessary consequence of national corruption.