The Life of ... Charles James Fox: ... His Political Career and a Delineation of His Character as a Statesman, Senator, and Man of Fashion ....E. Duyckinck, 1811 - 104 pages |
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Page 25
... death of his father , Lord Holland . He began to think for himself , and opportunities were not wanting when he endeavoured to shake off the trammels of dependence , and allowed his manly mind to take its full scope . Not the least memo ...
... death of his father , Lord Holland . He began to think for himself , and opportunities were not wanting when he endeavoured to shake off the trammels of dependence , and allowed his manly mind to take its full scope . Not the least memo ...
Page 30
... death , bequeathed to his son Charles a large sum of money , and considerable estates in the neigh- bourhood of Kingsgate , with the house he had built there in imitation of Tully's Formian ville on the coast of Baix . These bequests ...
... death , bequeathed to his son Charles a large sum of money , and considerable estates in the neigh- bourhood of Kingsgate , with the house he had built there in imitation of Tully's Formian ville on the coast of Baix . These bequests ...
Page 33
... death , in July , 1793 , of Lord Foley , the friend in whose judgment Mr. Fox most confided , relaxed his ardor in a pursuit that seems in more respects than one to be deprived of the former fervency of fashion . His lordship entered ...
... death , in July , 1793 , of Lord Foley , the friend in whose judgment Mr. Fox most confided , relaxed his ardor in a pursuit that seems in more respects than one to be deprived of the former fervency of fashion . His lordship entered ...
Page 48
... death of Sir Charles Hardy . This step was considered by Mr.Fox as a measure of so much criminality , so incongruous to the sense and derogatory to the honour of the nation , that it drew from the relative of Admiral Keppel a torrent of ...
... death of Sir Charles Hardy . This step was considered by Mr.Fox as a measure of so much criminality , so incongruous to the sense and derogatory to the honour of the nation , that it drew from the relative of Admiral Keppel a torrent of ...
Page 56
... death , still it ought to be followed up earnestly and solemnly ; nay , of so much importance is this inquiry to the public , that no bad use would be made of the skin of my departed friend , ( should such be his fate ) if , like that ...
... death , still it ought to be followed up earnestly and solemnly ; nay , of so much importance is this inquiry to the public , that no bad use would be made of the skin of my departed friend , ( should such be his fate ) if , like that ...
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The Life of ... Charles James Fox: ... His Political Career and a ... B C Walpole No preview available - 2023 |
The Life of ... Charles James Fox: ... His Political Career and a ... B C Walpole No preview available - 2018 |
The Life of ... Charles James Fox: ... His Political Career and a ... B C Walpole No preview available - 2015 |
Common terms and phrases
affairs afterwards answer appeared became began believe body brought Burke centinels chains Charles CHARLES JAMES FOX conduct conversation court death declared deliver desired discourse door ducats Duke Duke of Portland dungeon Earl Earl of Rochester endeavoured escape exertions father favour feet fortune Fox's French French revolution gave Gefhardt gentleman give Glatz guard hands heard honour hope horses hour House of Commons immediately iron king knew labour lady lieutenant live Lord Holland Lord North Lordship Magdeburg majesty major matrass means measures ment mind minister nature never night obliged occasion officers opposition pallisadoes parliament party passed person Pitt pleasure political prince principles prison procured Prussian reason received religion replied returned sand Schell sent shew soon soul Star Fort suffered thing thought thousand thousand guineas tion told took Trenck Vienna Whig whole
Popular passages
Page 79 - He said to me, that, as he heard it read, he felt an inward force upon him, which did so enlighten his mind and convince him, that he could resist it no longer ; for the words had an authority which did shoot like rays or beams in his mind; so that he was not only convinced by the reasonings he had about it, which satisfied his understanding, but by a power which did so eifectually constrain him, that he did ever after as firmly believe in his Saviour as if he had seen him in the clouds.
Page 27 - To this he answered, a man could not write with life unless he were heated by revenge ; for to write a satire without resentments, upon the cold notions of philosophy, was as if a man would, in cold blood, cut men's throats who had never offended him ; and he said the lies in these libels came often in as ornaments, that could not be spared without spoiling the beauty of the poem.
Page 89 - He seemed to feel, and even to envy, the happiness of my situation ; while I admired the powers of a superior man, as they are blended in his attractive character with the softness and simplicity of a child. Perhaps no human being was ever more perfectly exempt from the taint of malevolence, vanity, or falsehood.
Page 21 - Yet he laid out his wit very freely in libels and satires, in which he had a peculiar talent of mixing his wit with his malice, and fitting both with such apt words, that men were tempted to be pleased with them. From thence his composures came to be easily...
Page 18 - ... them. Boileau among the French, and Cowley among the English wits, were those he admired most. Sometimes other men's thoughts mixed with his composures, but that flowed rather from the impressions they made on him when he read them, by which they came to return upon him as his own thoughts, than that he servilely copied from any : for few men ever had a bolder flight of fancy, more steadily governed by judgment, than he had.
Page 76 - ... a true Repentance and Amendment of life for the time to come: or else, if the Lord pleaseth to put an end to my worldly being now, that He would mercifully accept of my Death-Bed Repentance, and perform that Promise that He hath been pleased to make, That at what time soever a Sinner doth Repent, He would receive him. Put up these Prayers, most dear Doctor, to Almighty God, for Your most Obedient and Languishing servant, ROCHESTER He told me, when.
Page 85 - Answer was, Oh that Language of Fiends which was so familiar to me, hangs yet about me: Sure none has deserved more to be damned than I have done.
Page iii - Vindication of the Authority, Constitution, and Laws, of the Church and State of Scotland...
Page 89 - I did not take notes of our discourses last winter after we parted ; so I may perhaps in the setting out of my answers to him, have enlarged on several things both more fully and more regularly, than I could say them in such free discourses as we had. I am not so sure of all I set down as said by me, as I am of all said by him to me. But yet the substance of the greatest part, even of that, is the same.
Page 33 - ... managed and tamed by the wisdom, and for the use of man ? So that it is no real absurdity to grant, that appetites were put into men on purpose to exercise their reason in the restraint and government of them, which to be able to do ministers a higher and more lasting pleasure to a man than to give them their full scope and range.