| William Edward Hartpole Lecky - 1887 - 644 páginas
...may ' measure" your concessions' and proceed by degrees without 'unfixing old interests ' at once. ' Reflect seriously on the possible consequences of...discontent, every hour accumulating, upon which every description of seditious men may draw at pleasure.' The difficulties and dangers of the question, if... | |
| William Edward Hartpole Lecky - 1892 - 600 páginas
...may ' measure your concessions ' and proceed by degrees without ' unfixing old interests ' at once. ' Reflect seriously on the possible consequences of...discontent, every hour accumulating, upon which every description of seditious men may draw at pleasure.' The difficulties and dangers of the question, if... | |
| Moorfield Storey - 1918 - 44 páginas
...demoraliza17 lion entailed by four years of civil war. We may well heed the words of Edmund Burke and "reflect seriously on the possible consequences of...every company of seditious men may draw at pleasure." When the Irish troops were brought to London by James II., Macaulay tells us how they were regarded... | |
| 1918 - 750 páginas
...with the Irish difficulty, " reflect seriously on the possible consequences of keeping in the heart of your community a bank of discontent, every hour accumulating, upon which every description of seditious men may draw at pleasure." Edmund Burke's warning, hitherto unheeded, is perhaps... | |
| John Morley - 1921 - 402 páginas
...Meanwhile for thirteen strenuous years we lived the life of brothers. CHAPTER II THE COMING DANGER Reflect seriously on the possible consequences of...every company of seditious men may draw at pleasure. — BURKE. Man, born in a family, is compelled to maintain society from necessity, from natural inclination,... | |
| Sir Ernest John Pickstone Benn - 1926 - 164 páginas
...history of a hundred years ago ? Does it do us any good, do we get any further that way ? Burke told us to " reflect seriously on the possible consequences...every company of seditious men may draw at pleasure ". Burke was writing at a time when half the population lived in daily company with starvation. Those... | |
| Moorfield Storey - 1918 - 48 páginas
...demoralizalion entailed by four years of civil war. We may well heed the words of Edmund Burke and "reflect seriously on the possible consequences of keeping in the hearts of your community n bank of discontent, every hour accumulating, upon which every company of seditious wen may draw at... | |
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