Critical and Historical Essays, Volume 1J.M. Dent, 1961 |
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Pagina 63
... feeling should produce effects which would probably have attended it even in an age less dis- tinguished by laxity of principle and indelicacy of sentiment . It was not till a natural death had terminated the paralytic old age of the ...
... feeling should produce effects which would probably have attended it even in an age less dis- tinguished by laxity of principle and indelicacy of sentiment . It was not till a natural death had terminated the paralytic old age of the ...
Pagina 70
... feeling was here new . The support which was given to Wilkes , the clamour for reform during the Ameri- can war ... feels a pain in his toe . And in the same manner the people , in the earlier part of the late reign , sincerely ...
... feeling was here new . The support which was given to Wilkes , the clamour for reform during the Ameri- can war ... feels a pain in his toe . And in the same manner the people , in the earlier part of the late reign , sincerely ...
Pagina 139
... feeling , " says Clarendon , " the trouble and agony which usually attend generous and magnanimous minds upon their having committed errors " ; feeling , we should say , the despicable repentance which attends the man who , having ...
... feeling , " says Clarendon , " the trouble and agony which usually attend generous and magnanimous minds upon their having committed errors " ; feeling , we should say , the despicable repentance which attends the man who , having ...
Inhoudsopgave
ENGLISH HISTORY | 3 |
Introduction by Douglas Jerrold | 77 |
JOHN HAMPDEN | 102 |
Copyright | |
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Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Critical and Historical Essays, Volume 1 Thomas Babington Macaulay Baron Macaulay Volledige weergave - 1900 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
administration admiration affairs appeared army Benares Bengal Bute Calcutta Catholic character Charles chief Church Clarendon Clive conduct considered constitution Council Court Cromwell Crown debate defend Duke Dupleix eloquence enemies England English excited favour favourite feeling France French friends George Grenville Governor-General Grenville Hampden Hastings honour Horace Walpole House of Commons hundred impeachment India James justice King liberty Long Parliament Lord Lord Holland Lord Rockingham Mahratta measures Meer Jaffier ment Milton mind ministers Nabob nation nature never Newcastle Nuncomar Omichund opinion Opposition Parliament parliamentary party passed persecuted person Petition of Right Pitt political Prince principles produced Protestant reform reign respect Revolution royal scarcely seemed Sir James Mackintosh soldiers soon sovereign spirit statesman Strafford strong talents temper Temple thought thousand pounds throne tion took Tories vote Walpole Whigs whole