The Works of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke: A vindication of natural society. An essay on the sublime and beautiful. Political miscellaniesGeorge Bell & sons, 1889 - Great Britain |
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Page vi
... Terror III . Obscurity 88888888 ib . 89 IV . Of the Difference between Clearness and Obscurity with regard to the Passions 90 • [ Iv . ] The same subject continued 91 v . Power 94 VI . Privation 99 VII . Vastness 100 VIII . Infinity ...
... Terror III . Obscurity 88888888 ib . 89 IV . Of the Difference between Clearness and Obscurity with regard to the Passions 90 • [ Iv . ] The same subject continued 91 v . Power 94 VI . Privation 99 VII . Vastness 100 VIII . Infinity ...
Page vii
... Terror 148 149 IX . Why visual Objects of great Dimensions are sublime x . Unity , why requisite to Vastness ib . 150 • XI . The artificial Infinite 151 XVI . Why Darkness is terrible XII . The Vibrations must be similar XIII . The ...
... Terror 148 149 IX . Why visual Objects of great Dimensions are sublime x . Unity , why requisite to Vastness ib . 150 • XI . The artificial Infinite 151 XVI . Why Darkness is terrible XII . The Vibrations must be similar XIII . The ...
Page 20
... terror and hatred ; it has always connected with it the ideas of treachery , cruelty , fraud , and tyranny ; and those writers , who have faithfully unveiled the mysteries of state - freema- sonry , have ever been held in general ...
... terror and hatred ; it has always connected with it the ideas of treachery , cruelty , fraud , and tyranny ; and those writers , who have faithfully unveiled the mysteries of state - freema- sonry , have ever been held in general ...
Page 26
... terror by the horrors of a state in- quisition . Here you see a people deprived of all rational freedom , and tyrannized over by about two thousand men ; and yet this body of two thousand are so far from enjoying any liberty by the ...
... terror by the horrors of a state in- quisition . Here you see a people deprived of all rational freedom , and tyrannized over by about two thousand men ; and yet this body of two thousand are so far from enjoying any liberty by the ...
Page 38
... terror against the breach of one of his positive institutions , or the neglect of some of his trivial forms , than against the neglect or breach of those duties and commandments of natural religion , which by these forms and ...
... terror against the breach of one of his positive institutions , or the neglect of some of his trivial forms , than against the neglect or breach of those duties and commandments of natural religion , which by these forms and ...
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act of navigation act of parliament administration agreeable America animals appear artificial society body called cerning civil list colonies colours commerce connexion consequences consider consideration constitution court danger darkness debt degree disposition duties effect England equal export favour feel France give greater Guadaloupe honour House of Commons human idea images imagination imitation infinite interest kind laws least less liberty light Lord Lord Bute Lord North mankind manner means measures members of parliament ment mind ministers ministry nation nature necessary never noble object observed operation opinion pain parliament party passions peace persons pleasure political present principle produce proportion purpose reason repeal revenue SECT sense sensible slavery society sophism sort species spirit stamp act strength sublime suppose sure taste taxes terror things tion trade truth virtue whilst whole words