| Augustus J. Thébaud - Ireland - 1878 - 574 pages
...proceeded from the perverted ingenuity of man." And, elsewhere : " To render men patient under the deprivation of all the rights of human nature, every thing which could give them a knowledge and feeling of those rights was rationally forbidden. To render humanity fit to be insulted, it was... | |
| William Edward Hartpole Lecky - Great Britain - 1879 - 634 pages
...render men patient under such a deprivation of all the rights of human nature, everything which would give them a knowledge or feeling of those rights was rationally forbidden.' " The legislation on the subject of 1 We have a curious illustration there have been thousands in Ireland... | |
| Edmund Burke - Ireland - 1881 - 464 pages
...to the body. To render men patient under a deprivation of all the rights of human nature, everything which could give them a knowledge or feeling of those...be insulted, it was fit that it should be degraded. But when we profess to restore men to the capacity for property, it is equally irrational and unjust... | |
| Irish ecclesiastical record - 1884 - 840 pages
...that to render men patient under the deprivation of all the rights of human nature, everything that could give them a knowledge or feeling of those rights was rationally forbidden, that to render humanity fit to be insulted it was necessary that it should be degraded. The Catholic... | |
| Edmund Burke - 1887 - 590 pages
...the body. To render men p»tient, under a deprivation of all the rights of human nature, everything which could give them a knowledge or feeling of those...be insulted, it was fit that it should be degraded. But when we profess to restore men to the capacity for property, it is equally irrational and unjust... | |
| William Edward Hartpole Lecky - Ireland - 1892 - 518 pages
...render men patient under such a deprivation of all the rights of human nature, everything which would give them a knowledge or feeling of those rights was rationally forbidden.' 1 The legislation on the subject of Catholic education may be briefly described, for it amounted simply... | |
| Edmund Burke - Great Britain - 1901 - 540 pages
...to the body. To render men patient under a deprivation of all the rights of human nature, everything which could give them a knowledge or feeling of those...be insulted, it was fit that it should be degraded. But when we profess to restore men to the capacity for property, it is equally irrational and unjust... | |
| Edmund Burke - Great Britain - 1901 - 524 pages
...to the body. To render men patient under a deprivation of all the rights of human nature, everything which could give them a knowledge or feeling of those...be insulted, it was fit that it should be degraded. But when we profess to restore men to the capacity for property, it is equally irrational and unjust... | |
| Edmund Burke - Biography & Autobiography - 1984 - 512 pages
...all the rights of human nature, every thing which could give them the knowlege or feeling of these rights, was rationally forbidden. To render humanity...be insulted, it was fit that it should be degraded. But when we profess to restore men to the capacity for property, it is equally irrational and unjust,... | |
| Edmund Burke - Biography & Autobiography - 1984 - 512 pages
...an horrible and impious System of Servitude, the Member was well fitted to the body. To render men patient under a deprivation of all the rights of human nature, every thing which could give them the knowlege or feeling of these rights, was rationally forbidden. To render humanity fit to be insulted,... | |
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