| Edmund Burke - English literature - 1812 - 508 pages
...general persecution with partial reformation, it is the very reverse. We found the people hereticks and idolaters ; we have, by way of improving their...beggars ; they remain in all the misfortune of their old errours, and all the superadded misery of their recent punishment. They were happy enough, in their... | |
| Mathew Carey - Ireland - 1819 - 536 pages
...country, I believe, since the world began, suffered so much on account of religion."^ " We found the people heretics and idolaters ; we have, by way of...superadded misery of their recent punishment:^ " They divided the nation into two distinct parties, without common interest, sympathy, or connexion. One... | |
| Mathew Carey - Ireland - 1819 - 536 pages
...country, I believe, since the world began, suffered so much on account of religion"\ " We found the people heretics and idolaters ; we have, by way of...all the misfortune of their old errors, and all the sttperadded misery of their recent punish" They divided the nation into two distinct parties, without... | |
| Gavin Young - India - 1822 - 412 pages
...we become ourselves the exceptions, and leave the many their nothing ; * Ed. Rev. No. 19, No. 22. " they remain in all the misfortune of their " old errors,...the superadded misery " of their recent punishment." It is improving on the bitterness of the epigrammatist to require the gratitude of a nation for being... | |
| Mathew Carey - Ireland - 1823 - 534 pages
...country, 1 believe, since the world began, suffered so much on account (if religion."99* " We found the people heretics and idolaters ; we have, by way of...all the misfortune of their old errors, and all the superaaded misery of their recent punishment.""** "They divided the nation into two distinct parties,... | |
| Edmund Burke - Great Britain - 1834 - 662 pages
...general persecution with partial reformation, it is the very reverse. We found the people hereticks l, " or an y of the council, shall , directly or indirectly,...or * pecu" niary or otherwise ; or any promise errours, and all the superadded misery of their recent punishment. They were happy enough, in their... | |
| Edmund Burke - Great Britain - 1834 - 618 pages
...condition, rendered them slaves and heggars ; they remain in all the misfortune of their old errours, and all the superadded misery of their recent punishment. They were happy enough, in their opinion at leasi, hefore the change: what henefits society then had, they partook of them all. They are now excluded... | |
| Edmund Burke - English literature - 1835 - 620 pages
...that is by blending general persecution with partial reformation, it is the very reverse. We found the people heretics and idolaters ; we have, by way of...beggars; they remain in all the misfortune of their old errours, and all the superadded misery of their recent punishment. They were happy enough, in their... | |
| Edmund Burke - Great Britain - 1837 - 660 pages
...general persecution with partial reformation, it is the very reverse. We found the people hereticks and idolaters; we have, by way of improving their...beggars; they remain in all the misfortune of their old errours, and all the superadded misery of their recent punishment. They were happy enough, in their... | |
| Edmund Burke - Great Britain - 1839 - 742 pages
...is, by blending general persecution with partial reformation, it is the very reverse. We found the people heretics and idolaters ; we have, by way of...recent punishment. They were happy enough, in their opim'on at least, before the change : what benefits society then had, they partook of them all. They... | |
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