Observations on Some of the Chief Difficulties and Disadvantages of English Society, with Suggestions for Their RemedyHarvey and Darton, 1829 - 216 Seiten |
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Seite iv
... comfort which it produces to hundreds of thousands of the destitute ; with these , and many other great and interesting advantages , both moral and physical , we appear to possess also , in no ordinary degree , the germs of every crime ...
... comfort which it produces to hundreds of thousands of the destitute ; with these , and many other great and interesting advantages , both moral and physical , we appear to possess also , in no ordinary degree , the germs of every crime ...
Seite 20
... comfort ; and while few will care to help one who presumes to hold a looking - glass to their eyes , many will bestow on him an ill turn , as occasions may serve , if , in pleading for the destitute and forlorn , he find it needful to ...
... comfort ; and while few will care to help one who presumes to hold a looking - glass to their eyes , many will bestow on him an ill turn , as occasions may serve , if , in pleading for the destitute and forlorn , he find it needful to ...
Seite 24
... comfort , pro- duced or promoted by any monarch of antiquity , it will appear far beneath that which our own beloved and truly princely Monarch may now produce ? primarily to his own subjects , comprising about one - eighth of the ...
... comfort , pro- duced or promoted by any monarch of antiquity , it will appear far beneath that which our own beloved and truly princely Monarch may now produce ? primarily to his own subjects , comprising about one - eighth of the ...
Seite 41
... comfort would cheer the country from one end to the other , to that degree , that the Augustan age at Rome would be a speck , compared to it . But this points to an accumulation of wealth by the journeyman mechanic and labourer ; and ...
... comfort would cheer the country from one end to the other , to that degree , that the Augustan age at Rome would be a speck , compared to it . But this points to an accumulation of wealth by the journeyman mechanic and labourer ; and ...
Seite 49
... comfort and respectability that would be spread among them ; who , with such habits , and corresponding feelings , would be , beyond any moderate comparison , more powerful , more happy , more enlightened , more loyal , more virtuous ...
... comfort and respectability that would be spread among them ; who , with such habits , and corresponding feelings , would be , beyond any moderate comparison , more powerful , more happy , more enlightened , more loyal , more virtuous ...
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Observations on Some of the Chief Difficulties and Disadvantages of English ... George Knight Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2015 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
afford amount appears bad education bay horse benefit blessing Catholic emancipation cause circumstances classes colony comfort committed common honesty common sense conduct court crime criminal cross question debt degree destitute distress district DIVINE DIVINE PROVIDENCE drunkenness duties effect employment encouragement endeavour England Englishmen evil exhibit expense fact feelings greater guilt habits happiness honest honour horse human hundred increase industrious innocent Interest Annual Excess judge jurisprudence jury justice labour land lative laws lawyers legislation loan-mongers Mauritius means ment millions minds mischief nation national debt nature never offences oppression parish party payment perhaps persons plaintiff police police-officer poor population pounds practice present principle produce profitable promote proportion punishment quit-rent raw produce reduce religion remedy respectability revenue sense and common shillings simple society sophistry stolen suffered tangible thereby thieves things thousands tion tivation usurious vigilance virtue wife's child writer
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 149 - Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For ye devour widows' houses, and for a pretence make long prayer: therefore ye shall receive the greater damnation.
Seite 218 - ... they are indescribably propitious, auspicious, and cheering. They presage the coming of that glorious future, when " all shall know the Lord, from the least to the greatest," and when " there shall be none to harm or destroy