| 1872 - 826 pages
...low and obscure condition followed on the general vitiation of its usage in the matter of speech ; for, let the words of a country be in part unhandsome...already long prepared for any amount of servility. On the other hand, we have never heard that any empire, any state, did not at least flourish in a middling... | |
| David Masson - 1859 - 714 pages
...its low and obscure condition followed on the general vitiation of its usage in the matter of speech; for, let the words of a country be in part unhandsome...already long prepared for any amount of servility ? On the other hand, wo have never heard that any empire, any state, did not at least flourish in a... | |
| David Masson - 1859 - 718 pages
...low and obscure condition followed on the general vitiation of its usage in the matter of speech ; for, let the words of a country be in part unhandsome...Inhabitants of that country are an indolent, idly-yawning raw, with minds already long prepared for any amount of servility? On the other hand, we have never... | |
| George Washington Moon - 1865 - 240 pages
...in the " matter of speech ; for, let the words of a " country be in part unhandsome and of" fensive in themselves, in part debased " by wear and wrongly...uttered, and what " do they declare but, by no light indica" tion, that the inhabitants of that country " are an indolent, idly-yawning race, with "minds... | |
| George Washington Moon - 1865 - 238 pages
...and obscure condition followed on " the general vitiation of its usage in the " matter of speech ; for, let the words of a " country be in part unhandsome and of" fensive in themselves, in part debased " by wear and wrongly uttered, and what " do they declare... | |
| George Washington Moon - 1868 - 280 pages
...low " and obscure condition followed on the general " vitiation of its usage in the matter of speech; for, " let the words of a country be in part unhandsome...wrongly uttered, and what do they " declare but, by no slight indication, that the " inhabitants of that country are an indolent, idly" yawning race, with... | |
| 1873 - 634 pages
...low and obscure condition followed on the general -vitiation of its usage in the matter of speech ; for, let the words of a country be in part unhandsome...already long prepared for any amount of servility. On the other hand, we have never heard that any empire, any state, did not at least flourish in a middling... | |
| David Masson - 1875 - 698 pages
...low and obscure condition followed on the general vitiation of its usage in the matter of speech ; for, let the words of a country be in part unhandsome...already long prepared for any amount of servility? On the other hand, we have never heard that any empire, any state, did not at least flourish in a middling... | |
| William Mathews - 1876 - 474 pages
...interests of humanity. " Let the words of a country," says Milton in a letter to an Italian scholar, "be in part unhandsome and offensive in themselves,...already long prepared for any amount of servility?" Sometimes the spirit which governs employers or employed, and other classes of men, in their mutual... | |
| David Masson - 1881 - 878 pages
...and obscure condition were consequent on the general vitiation of its usage in the matter of speech. For, let the words of a country be in part unhandsome and offensive in themselves, in part debased by weiir and wrongly uttered, and what do they declare but, by no light indication, that the inhabitants... | |
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