Men so degraded, a state of strong constraint is a sort of necessary substitute for freedom; since, bad as it is, it may deliver them in some Measure from the worst of all Slavery, that is the despotism of their own blind and brutal passions. The French Revolution - Página 182por Charles MacFarlane - 1844Vista completa - Acerca de este libro
| 1833 - 784 páginas
...privileges of our kind, I mean the abuse or oblivion of our rational facultics,and & ferocious hulvcility, which makes us prompt to wrong and violence, destroys...and transforms us into something little better than wild beasts. To men to degraded, a itate of strong restraint it a necessary substitute far freedom... | |
| 1833 - 1056 páginas
...privileges of our kind; I mean the abuse or ubliuiun of our rational faculties, 3.i\&aferocivusindocility, which makes us prompt to wrong and violence, destroys...and transforms us into something little better than wild beasts. To men so degraded, a state of strong constraint is a sort of necessary substitute for... | |
| 1833 - 1032 páginas
...privileges of our kind ; I mean the abuse or oblivion of our rational faculties, and aferocious indocility, which makes us prompt to wrong and violence, destroys...and transforms us into something little better than wild beasts. To men so degraded, a state of strong constraint is a sort of necessary substitute for... | |
| George Croly - 1840 - 334 páginas
...privileges of our kind ; I mean the abuse or oblivion of our rationalfaculties, and & ferocious indocility, which makes us prompt to wrong and violence, destroys...and transforms us into something little better than wild beasts. To men so degraded, a state of strong constraint is a sort of necessary substitute for... | |
| George Croly - 1840 - 612 páginas
...privileges of our kind ; I mean the abuse or oblivion of our rational faculties, and & ferocious indocility, which makes us prompt to wrong and violence, destroys...and transforms us into something little better than wild beasts. To men so degraded, a state of strong constraint is a sort of necessary substitute for... | |
| Edmund Burke - 1852 - 678 páginas
...privileges of our kind. I mean the abuse, or oblivion, of our rational faculties, and a ferocious indocility which makes us prompt to wrong and violence, destroys...and transforms us into something little better than the description of wild beasts. To men so degraded, a state of strong constraint is a sort of necessary... | |
| Sir James Prior - 1854 - 840 páginas
...privileges of our kind, / mean the abuse or oblivion of our national faculties ; and a ferocious indocility, which makes us prompt to wrong and violence, destroys...wild beasts. To men so degraded, a state of strong restraint is a sort of necessary substitute for freedom ; since, bad as it is, it may deliver them... | |
| sir James Prior - 1854 - 586 páginas
...privileges of our kind, I mean the abuse or oblivion of our national faculties ; and a ferocious indocility, which makes us prompt to wrong and violence, destroys...wild beasts. To men so degraded, a state of strong restraint is a sort of necessary substitute for freedom ; since, bad as it is, it may deliver them... | |
| Edmund Burke - 1877 - 466 páginas
...of our kind — I mean, the abuse, or oblivion of our rationil faculties, and a ferocious indocility which makes us prompt to wrong and violence, destroys...and transforms us into something little better than the description of wild beasts.' 1. 17. a permanent body, &c. See the same Letter, pp. 107-113. 1.... | |
| William Ewart Gladstone - 1886 - 80 páginas
...kind. I mean the abuse or oblivion of our rational faculties," which •Correspondence iii. , 105. " destroys our social nature, and transforms us into something little better than the description of wild beasts." But unless the policy, from its harmonising with the love of liberty,... | |
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