The Miscellaneous Works of the Right Honourable Sir James Mackintosh, Volume 3 |
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Page 8
... monarchs of Europe , whom he alarms for the security of their thrones , and , having insured the moderation of a fanatical rabble , by giving out among them the savage war - whoop of atheism , he already fancies himself in full march to ...
... monarchs of Europe , whom he alarms for the security of their thrones , and , having insured the moderation of a fanatical rabble , by giving out among them the savage war - whoop of atheism , he already fancies himself in full march to ...
Page 27
... monarchy was inseparably connected with the division of the States - General : divided , that body was subject to the Crown ; united , its authority was sovereign , and its force irresistible . " * The King was not , however , shaken by ...
... monarchy was inseparably connected with the division of the States - General : divided , that body was subject to the Crown ; united , its authority was sovereign , and its force irresistible . " * The King was not , however , shaken by ...
Page 28
... monarchy as France . The spirit of resistance to uncivic com- mands broke forth at once in every part of the empire . The garrisons of the cities of Rennes , Bour- deaux , Lyons , and Grenoble , refused , almost at the same moment , to ...
... monarchy as France . The spirit of resistance to uncivic com- mands broke forth at once in every part of the empire . The garrisons of the cities of Rennes , Bour- deaux , Lyons , and Grenoble , refused , almost at the same moment , to ...
Page 29
... monarchy of Europe but they must be felt by all . An elaborate discipline may for a while in Germany debase and brutalise soldiers too much to receive any impres- sions from their fellow men : artificial and local insti- tutions are ...
... monarchy of Europe but they must be felt by all . An elaborate discipline may for a while in Germany debase and brutalise soldiers too much to receive any impres- sions from their fellow men : artificial and local insti- tutions are ...
Page 36
... monarchies , like every other consistent and permanent government , assimilate every thing with which they are connected to their own genius . The Nobility , the Priesthood , the Judicial Aristocracy , were unfit to be members of a free ...
... monarchies , like every other consistent and permanent government , assimilate every thing with which they are connected to their own genius . The Nobility , the Priesthood , the Judicial Aristocracy , were unfit to be members of a free ...
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America ancient army authority body boroughs British Burke Calonne character circumstances civil civilised classes consider constitution Constitution of France Court crimes Crown danger declared Demerara despotism Dom Miguel Dom Pedro effect election electors enemies England English established Europe evil exercise existence favour feelings foreign France freedom French Revolution Genoese Gentlemen Honourable hostility House of Commons human important independence influence interest Jacobins justice King language Learned Friend legislative Legislature libel liberty Lisbon Lord Lord William Bentinck mankind means ment Miguel military mind minister monarchy moral nature necessary Nobility Noble object opinion oppressed Parliament party peace Peltier perhaps Pharsalia political popular Portugal possess present principles privileges provinces punishment question racter reason recognition Reform representation representatives republic respect sentiments society sovereign Spain spirit States-General suffrage supposed tion trust universal suffrage usurpation whole
Popular passages
Page 94 - But as to the share of power, authority, and direction which each individual ought to have in the management of a state, that I must deny to be among the direct original rights of man in civil society." This is evidently denying the existence of what .has been called political, in contradistinction to civil liberty.
Page 557 - as a general principle of the English constitution, that the interests of every unrepresented district are in danger of being overlooked or sacrificed, and that the inhabitants of such districts are therefore interested to have knights and burgesses in Parliament, " of their own election, to represent the condition of their country.
Page 238 - in which this case seems to me to merit your most serious attention. I consider it as the first of a long series of conflicts between the greatest power in the world, and the only free press remaining in Europe. No man living is more thoroughly convinced than I am, that my Learned Friend
Page 102 - He who freely magnifies what has been nobly done, and fears not to declare as freely what might have been done better, gives you the best covenant of his fidelity. His highest praise is not flattery, and his plainest advice is praise.
Page 445 - and I heartily pray that they may be for ever united in the cause of justice and liberty) cannot be contemplated without the utmost pleasure by every enlightened citizen of either. Above all, Sir, there is one coincidence between them, which is, I trust, of happy augury to the whole
Page 147 - To follow, not to force the public inclination; to give a direction, a form, a technical dress, and a specific sanction to the general sense of the community, is the true end of legislature:
Page 275 - prepared to second his ambition by rebellion, anarchy, and regicide, in every Protestant state. Elizabeth was among the first objects of his hostility. That wise and magnanimous Princess placed herself in the front of the battle for the liberties of Europe. Though she had to contend at home with his fanatical faction, which almost occupied
Page 143 - Thus we see the harmony of the culprits: the one is only a perspicuous and precise abridgment of the other. The harmony of the judges will not be found less remarkable: Mr. Burke, " when he talks as if he had made a discovery, only follows a precedent:
Page 293 - twice rescued the intrepid satirist* from his fangs, and sent out with defeat and disgrace the Usurper's Attorney-General from what he had the impudence to call his court! Even then, Gentlemen, when all law and liberty were trampled under the feet of a military banditti,—when those great crimes were perpetrated
Page 292 - In the court where we are now met, Cromwell twice sent a satirist on his tyranny to be convicted and punished as a libeller, and in this court, — almost in sight of the scaffold streaming with the blood of his Sovereign,—within hearing of the clash of his bayonets which drove out Parliaments with scorn and