Letters on the Study and Use of HistoryA. Millar, 1752 - 481 pagina's |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-5 van 66
Pagina 43
... CHARLES II's reign might rankle ftill at the hearts of fome men , but could not be set to account among the causes of his depofition ; fince he had fucceeded , not- withstanding them , peaceably to the throne , and the nation in general ...
... CHARLES II's reign might rankle ftill at the hearts of fome men , but could not be set to account among the causes of his depofition ; fince he had fucceeded , not- withstanding them , peaceably to the throne , and the nation in general ...
Pagina 59
... CHARLES the eigth in order to gratify his own , and calling the French into that country . PETER Owed his distress to his folly in de- parting from the general tenor of conduct his father LAURENCE had held , and hoped to relieve himself ...
... CHARLES the eigth in order to gratify his own , and calling the French into that country . PETER Owed his distress to his folly in de- parting from the general tenor of conduct his father LAURENCE had held , and hoped to relieve himself ...
Pagina 60
... CHARLES the eigth , put the port of Leghorn , the fortreffes of Pifa , and all the keys of the country into this prince's hands ; whereby he difarmed the Florentine common- wealth , and ruined himself . He was de- prived of his ...
... CHARLES the eigth , put the port of Leghorn , the fortreffes of Pifa , and all the keys of the country into this prince's hands ; whereby he difarmed the Florentine common- wealth , and ruined himself . He was de- prived of his ...
Pagina 215
... CHARLES the feventh , who seems to have been neither a greater hero nor a greater politician than HENRY the fixth ; and even than by the vigour and union of the French nobility in his fervice . After LEWIS came to the crown , EDWARD the ...
... CHARLES the feventh , who seems to have been neither a greater hero nor a greater politician than HENRY the fixth ; and even than by the vigour and union of the French nobility in his fervice . After LEWIS came to the crown , EDWARD the ...
Pagina 218
... CHARLES the eighth , son and fucceffor of LEWIS the eleventh , formed great defigns of foreign con- quefts , tho they were disappointed by his inability , by the levity of the nation , and by other causes . LEWIS the twelfth and FRANCIS ...
... CHARLES the eighth , son and fucceffor of LEWIS the eleventh , formed great defigns of foreign con- quefts , tho they were disappointed by his inability , by the levity of the nation , and by other causes . LEWIS the twelfth and FRANCIS ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Letters on the Study and Use of History Henry St. John Bolingbroke (Viscount) Volledige weergave - 1788 |
Letters on the Study and Use of History ... Henry St. John Bolingbroke (Viscount) Volledige weergave - 1791 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
affiftance againſt againſt France allies almoſt Auftria becauſe cafe cauſe CHARLES the fecond circumſtances confequences courſe crown defign defire Dutch emperor England eſtabliſhed Europe faid fame favour fecurity feemed ferve feven fhall fhew fide fign fince firſt fome foon French ftate ftrength ftudy fubject fucceffion fuccefs fuch fufficient fupported fure fyftem grand alliance greateſt himſelf hiſtory houſe of Auſtria houſe of Bourbon increaſed inftance intereft king of France king of Spain laft laſt leaſt lefs LEWIS the fourteenth lord lordſhip Low Countries meaſure minifters monarchy moſt muſt nation neceffary obferve occafion oppoſed ourſelves paffed paffions party peace PHILIP pleaſure poffeffion preſent pretenfions prince purpoſe queen racters raiſed reaſon refpect ſay ſeveral ſhall ſhe ſhort ſhould ſome Spaniſh ſpeak ſpirit ſtate ſtill ſtudy of hiſtory ſuch thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe thouſand fix hundred thouſand ſeven hundred tion treaty treaty of Utrecht uſe whilſt whole
Populaire passages
Pagina 61 - ... disastrous campaigns, we saw every scene of the war full of action. All those wherein he appeared, and many of those wherein he was not then an actor — but abettor, however, of their action — were crowned with the most triumphant success. I take with pleasure this opportunity of doing justice to that great man, whose faults I knew, whose virtues I admired, and whose memory, as the greatest general and as the greatest minister that our country or perhaps any other has produced, I honour.
Pagina 17 - The reason of this judgment, which I quote from one of Seneca's epistles in confirmation of my own opinion, rests, I think, on this; that when examples are pointed out to us...
Pagina 29 - There is scarce any folly or vice more epidemical among the sons of men, than that ridiculous and hurtful vanity by which the people of each country are apt to prefer themselves to those of every other; and to make their own customs, and manners, and opinions, the standards of right and wrong, of true and false.
Pagina 198 - I may say so, of undefiled reason ? Is it not worth our while to approve or condemn, on our own authority, what we receive in the beginning of life on the authority of other men, who were not then better able to judge for us, than we are now to judge for ourselves?
Pagina 143 - Bodin's pupil, resolves to read all, will not have time, no nor capacity neither, to do any thing else. He will not be able to think, without which it is impertinent to read; nor to act, without which it is impertinent to think. He will assemble materials with much pains, and purchase them at much expense.
Pagina 186 - Till this happen, the profession of the law will scarce deserve to be ranked among the learned professions ; and whenever it happens, one of the vantage grounds, to which men must climb, is metaphysical, and the other historical knowledge.
Pagina 12 - There is no need of saying how this passion grows, among civilized nations, in proportion to the 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.
Pagina 247 - 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 of the universe; innumerable suns, whose beams enlighten and cherish the unknown worlds which roll...
Pagina 185 - I might instance in other professions the obligation men lie under of applying themselves to certain parts of History; and I can hardly forbear doing it in that of the Law, — in its nature the noblest and most beneficial to mankind, in its abuse and debasement the most sordid and the most pernicious. A lawyer now is nothing more (I speak of ninetynine in a hundred at least...
Pagina 48 - ... of those who govern or are governed in them, will incline to think, that if the scales can be brought back by a war, nearly, though not exactly, to the point they were at before this...