Crito: Or, Essays on Various Subjects. ...Messrs. Dodsley; Becket and de Hondt; White; Payne; and Cooke, 1767 |
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Page 32
... punishment , as I was of the guilt . I made my retreat , with precipitation , and not without a croud of reflexions arising in my mind , on the fata- nical difpofition of a bribing candidate , who is capable of taking the cruel advan ...
... punishment , as I was of the guilt . I made my retreat , with precipitation , and not without a croud of reflexions arising in my mind , on the fata- nical difpofition of a bribing candidate , who is capable of taking the cruel advan ...
Page 75
... punishment . Check vice as much as poffible , both open and fecret . This is to be done by good education , good laws , and infinitely more by the good example of the leading people . It will , however , be difficult , if not impoffible ...
... punishment . Check vice as much as poffible , both open and fecret . This is to be done by good education , good laws , and infinitely more by the good example of the leading people . It will , however , be difficult , if not impoffible ...
Page 76
... punishment you please , fhort of death , being certain , that hardly any punishment is too fevere for fuch unpardonable neglect of that duty , in which voluntary negli- gence only can occafion a failure of fuc- cefs . You will perhaps ...
... punishment you please , fhort of death , being certain , that hardly any punishment is too fevere for fuch unpardonable neglect of that duty , in which voluntary negli- gence only can occafion a failure of fuc- cefs . You will perhaps ...
Page 82
... punish with imprifonment , & c . according to the attrociousness of the offence , and the circumstances of the cafe . I hope , my good people of times to come , that you will give a little attention to thebeha- viour of your vulgar ...
... punish with imprifonment , & c . according to the attrociousness of the offence , and the circumstances of the cafe . I hope , my good people of times to come , that you will give a little attention to thebeha- viour of your vulgar ...
Page 99
... punishing for what they may please to call , contempt of the court , or breach of pri- vilege , without the full and ... punishments they please on the best friends to liberty , who will , of course , be the most likely to break through ...
... punishing for what they may please to call , contempt of the court , or breach of pri- vilege , without the full and ... punishments they please on the best friends to liberty , who will , of course , be the most likely to break through ...
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Common terms and phrases
abfolutely againſt antient becauſe beſt buſineſs cafe caufe cauſe chooſe Chriftian cifely confequence confiderable confiftent conftitution corrupt courſe creatures CRITO MINOR dæmons defign defire difpofitions divine effects eſtabliſh evil exiſtence faid fame fecure feems felves fenfe fervice fett fhall fhew fhould fome fomewhat fpecies fpirit ftands ftate fubjects fuch fuffering fufficient fuperior fuppofe fupreme fyftem grand Enemy greateſt happineſs happy himſelf hoftility honeft honour houfe houſe of commons inftance intereft leaft leaſt lefs liberty mankind manner means meaſures ment moft moral agents moſt muft muſt myſelf nation nature neceffary obferved occafion ourſelves papifts perfons pleaſe pleaſure poffible popery preſent prevent propofed puniſhment purpoſe raiſe reader reaſon refpect religion reprefent ruin SATAN ſcheme Scripture SECUND ſee ſtate ſuch thefe themſelves theſe things thofe thoſe thouſand tion underſtand univerfe uſed vice virtue whofe whoſe worſhip
Popular passages
Page 217 - shall call on the rocks and mountains to fall on them, and hide them from the face of Him that sitteth on the Throne, and from the wrath of the Lamb ; for the great day of His wrath is come, and who shall be able to stand?
Page 231 - ... eftablifhed upon. To what grofs abfurdities the following of cuftom, when reafon has left it, may lead, we may be fatisfied, when we fee the bare name of a town, of which there remains not fo much as the ruins, where fcarce fo much houfing as a fheepcote...
Page 215 - Depart from us; For we desire not the knowledge of thy ways. What is the Almighty, that we should serve him? And what profit should we have, if we pray unto him?
Page 216 - Lord sufficiently natural; it would be as easy to force a camel through a door-way, as small as the eye of a needle, as for a rich man to enter into the kingdom oj God.
Page 50 - PATRIOT is he, who fallow's virtue for virtue's fake; who fcrves his country for the fake offerving his country. His country^ I fay : not himfelf. He thinks not of the vile emoluments of mercenary ftate-offices ; he does not, like the giants, rearing mount Pelion upon Ofla, and Olympus on Pelion, heap* employment on employment, penfion upon penfion, reverfion upon reverfion, and fine-cure upon fine-cure, in order to clamber up the dunghill-height, to which fordid ambition, or more fordid avarice,...
Page 54 - ... as they can from the difficulties he himfelf has drawn them into ? Will he wheedle and deceive them, in order to furprife their undeferved efteem, and then make ufe of that very partiality to abufe and injure them r Will he be the...
Page 44 - ... the wheels of government will be clogged, and the machine, inftead of being regularly drawn in the road of fuccefs and honour, by the concurrent endeavours of thofe, whofe bufmefs it is to conduct it, will be in danger of being torn in pieces by the jarring efforts of worthlefs men, who would rather fee their country in ruins, than in any other hands befides thofe of their own faction.
Page 51 - The true patriot is never feen to elbow thofe around him, to worm himfelf in, and fcrew others out, to engage himfelf in factions and cabals, to infift on fordid .gains for himfelf, and his whole crew of friends. What he defires, is, that his country may be ferved. If that is likely to be better done by others, than by himfelf, (and modefty will often incline him to think fo, when it...
Page 54 - The true patiiot is that to his country, which a wife and kind father is to his own dear children. Will a wife and kind father confult his own advantage preferably to that of his children ? Will he make his gain of their lofs r Will he ftrip them to enrich himfelf?
Page 231 - ... in tract of time this reprefentation becomes very unequal and difproportionate to the reafons it was at firft eftablifhed upon. To what grofs abfurdities the following of cuftom, when reafon has left it, may lead, we may be fatisfied, when we fee the bare name of a town, of which there remains not fo much as the ruins, where fcarce fo much houfing as a...