| Edmund Burke - 1791 - 824 páginas
...was defcribed as " the moft ftupendous and " glorious edifice of liberty, which had been erect" ed on the foundation of human integrity in " any time or country," it might at firft, have led the hearer into an opinion, that the conftruction of the new fabric was an object of... | |
| Edmund Burke - 1791 - 232 páginas
...was defcribed as " the moft ftupendous and " glorious edifice of liberty, which had been ere<5t" ed on the foundation of human integrity in " any time or country," it might at firft, have led the hearer into an opinion, that the conftruftion of the new fabric was an objeft of... | |
| Edmund Burke - 1792 - 636 páginas
...that namelefs thing which has been lately fet up in France was defcribed as " the moft flupendous *f and glorious edifice of liberty, which had been "...foundation of human integrity in " any time or country," it mjght at firit have led the hearer into an opinion, that the conftruction of the new fabric was an... | |
| Ghost of Alfred, John Bowles - 1798 - 150 páginas
...fcourge of mankind, when, in the moft public and folemn manner, you pronounced it it to be the m&ft glorious edifice of liberty, which had been erected on the foundation of human integrity in any age or country. Confiftently with this declaration, you have made the French Revolution the theme of... | |
| Edmund Burke - 1803 - 390 páginas
...that namelefs thing which has been lately fet up in France was defcribed as " the moft flu's " pendous and glorious edifice of liberty,, which " had been...human" " integrity in any time or country," it might at firft have led the hearer into an opinion;, that the* conftruftion of the new fabrick was an objeft... | |
| John Richards Green - 1809 - 558 páginas
...edifice upon all occasions, aiid in the highest strain of panegyric. Mr. Fox had himself termed it " the most stupendous and glorious edifice of liberty...foundation of human integrity, in any time or country." — A second motive, which had some little influence over him, was of a more personal nature. — He... | |
| Charles James Fox - 1815 - 620 páginas
...preposterous edifice upon all occasions, and in the highest strain. Mr. Fox had himself termed it " the most stupendous and glorious edifice of liberty...foundation of human integrity in any time or country." A second motive, which had, indeed, some little influence over him, was of a more personal nature.... | |
| Charles James Fox - 1815 - 516 páginas
...when to be baffled and disgraced in the eyes of Europe was an object of ardent expectation ! tv/rich had been erected on the foundation of human integrity in any time or cotmtry. * After observing that it was well known, there were groat and good men on both sides the... | |
| 1842 - 614 páginas
...— •who declared in his place, in Parliament in April, I79l, that he '• Considered it altogether as the most stupendous and glorious edifice of liberty...foundation of human integrity in any time or country." The almost immediate results of this and similar opinions from the * Memoira of the Life and Times... | |
| Sir James Prior - 1824 - 618 páginas
...occasions he applauded by name, and in the hearing of the whole House, the new French Constitution, as " the most stupendous and glorious edifice of liberty...foundation of human integrity in any time or country," he afterwards, when pushed by Mr. Burke, explained away his meaning by saying that it applied to the... | |
| |