| Griffith, Farran, Browne and co - 1883 - 392 oldal
...and refine those grosser propositions which laziness and consent made current in vulgar conversation. He was superior to all those passions and affections...transactions of human affairs. In the last short Parliament, Ite was a burgess in the House of Commons ; and from the debates, which were there managed with all... | |
| Mary Russell Mitford - 1883 - 544 oldal
...those grosser propositions, which laziness and consent made current in vulgar conversation. ***** " He was superior to all those passions and affections...; and that made him too much a contemner of those acts which must be indulged in the transactions of human affairs. In the last short parliament he was... | |
| C. Duxbury - 1884 - 278 oldal
...renewed. He (Lord Viscount Falkland) was superior to all those passions and affections which attend public minds, and was guilty of no other ambition than of...contemner of those arts which must be indulged in the transaction of human affairs. GRIMM'S LAW. When we compare the various languages of the Indo-European... | |
| Arthur Howard Galton - 1888 - 368 oldal
...deprived of great jewels in the concealment of them, and that they are not published to the world. He was superior to all those passions and affections...house of commons ; and, from the debates which were then managed with all imaginable gravity and sobriety, he contracted such a reverence to parliaments,... | |
| Edward Hyde Earl of Clarendon - 1888 - 544 oldal
...deprived of great jewels in the concealment of them, and that they are not published to the world *. 222. He was superior to all those passions and affections...short Parliament he was a burgess in the House of Commons2; and from the debates, which were then managed) with all imaginable gravity and sobriety,... | |
| Edward Hyde Earl of Clarendon - 1889 - 398 oldal
...deprived of great jewels in the concealment of them, and that they are not published to the world. He was superior to all those passions and affections...House of Commons ; and, from the debates which were then managed with all imaginable gravity and sobriety, he contracted such a reverence to parliaments,... | |
| Sir Henry Craik - 1894 - 638 oldal
...deprived of great jewels in the concealment of them, and that they are not published to the world. He was superior to all those passions and affections...house of commons ; and, from the debates which were then managed with all imaginable gravity and sobriety, he contracted such a reverence to parliaments,... | |
| Sir Henry Craik - 1894 - 624 oldal
...deprived of great jewels in the concealment of them, and that they are not published to the world. He was superior to all those passions and affections...house of commons ; and, from the debates which were then managed with all imaginable gravity and sobriety, he contracted such a reverence to parliaments,... | |
| John Howard Bertram Masterman - 1897 - 308 oldal
...accursed civil war, than that single loss, it must be most infamous and execrable to posterity. . . . 'He was superior to all those passions and affections...be indulged in the transactions of human affairs. ' Thus fell that incomparable young man, in the fourand-thirtieth year of his age, having so much dispatched... | |
| Thomas Longueville - 1897 - 242 oldal
...However "wild" he may have been in boyhood, as Lloyd and Wood pronounced him, Clarendon assures us that " he was superior to all those passions and affections...of knowledge, and to be reputed a lover of all good men."f " He had a courage of the most clear and keen temper, and so far from fear that he seemed not... | |
| |