The StatesmanLongman, Rees, Orme, Brown, Green, & Longman, 1836 - 267 psl. |
Knygos viduje
Rezultatai 1–5 iš 21
v psl.
... exercise and direction which they gave to men's thoughts . But these consequences , whatever they may have been , were so indi- rectly brought about , that he who would examine wherein they have been injurious # and wherein beneficial A 3.
... exercise and direction which they gave to men's thoughts . But these consequences , whatever they may have been , were so indi- rectly brought about , that he who would examine wherein they have been injurious # and wherein beneficial A 3.
vi psl.
... exercising political func- tions , which might seem to be no unimportant part of political science , has occupied hardly any place in the speculations of its professors . It is not necessary , I admit , that the struc- tural and ...
... exercising political func- tions , which might seem to be no unimportant part of political science , has occupied hardly any place in the speculations of its professors . It is not necessary , I admit , that the struc- tural and ...
viii psl.
... exercising , so far as their political disquisitions are concerned , rather their reasoning than their judging faculties ; perhaps I might even venture to say of some of them , exercising the former faculties almost to the exclusion of ...
... exercising , so far as their political disquisitions are concerned , rather their reasoning than their judging faculties ; perhaps I might even venture to say of some of them , exercising the former faculties almost to the exclusion of ...
5 psl.
... exercise for the reasoning faculty employed in this science less loosely than in ethics or history , less abstractedly than in mathematics . - In the further progress of the pupil , it will be well that he should be brought more closely ...
... exercise for the reasoning faculty employed in this science less loosely than in ethics or history , less abstractedly than in mathematics . - In the further progress of the pupil , it will be well that he should be brought more closely ...
7 psl.
... exercises , the pupil should be encouraged to frequent juvenile de- bating societies . If the practice of public speaking be not begun in youth , it will be a matter of serious difficulty afterwards ; and failure will then be more ...
... exercises , the pupil should be encouraged to frequent juvenile de- bating societies . If the practice of public speaking be not begun in youth , it will be a matter of serious difficulty afterwards ; and failure will then be more ...
Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
activity administrative government advantage affairs ambition amongst ation cabinet career cerning CHAPTER character circumstances civil clerks common commonly CONCERNING conscience consequences consider consideration daily political defect duties effect essential evil execution executive Government exercise faculty feel functionary give hand herent House of Commons imagination importance individual intellectual interests interviews judgment kind knowledge labour least less lively Lord Bacon Machiavelli man's mankind manner marriage matters measure ment merit mind minister mismeasurement moral nature neral ness nister objects observed obtain occasion opinion panegyric Parliament party perhaps persons political popular practice principle purpose quarrel question quires reason regard rule sense society speak spirit statesman statesmanship station strength strong syren Tacitus talents thing Thomas Munro tion transaction truth at large turally understanding viduals vitia Whigs whilst wisdom
Populiarios ištraukos
159 psl. - And what then is the field for these inventive and self-suggested operations ; and if practicable, would they be less important than those which are called for by the obstreperous voices of to-day and tomorrow ? ' I am aware that under popular institutions there are many measures of exceeding advantage to the people, which it would be in vain for a Minister to project, until the people, or an influential portion of the people, should become apprised of the advantage, and ask for it ; many which can...
30 psl. - If there be in the character not only sense and soundness, but virtue of a high order, then, however little appearance there may be of talent, a certain portion of wisdom may be relied upon almost implicitly.
70 psl. - ... fidelity to all womanly instincts, makes her, in our intercourse with literature, not only a companion, but a counsellor and a helpmate, fulfilling in this sphere the purposes of her creation. It is in letters as in life, and there (as has been well said) the woman " who praises and blames, persuades and resists, warns or exhorts upon occasion given, and carries her love through all with a strong heart, and not a weak fondness — she is the true helpmate.
152 psl. - ... does not call for; by conciliating loud and energetic individuals at the expense of such public interests as are dumb or do not attract attention ; by sacrificing everywhere what is feeble and obscure to what is influential and cognizable ; by such means and shifts as these, the...
160 psl. - This then is the great evil and want — that there is not within the pale of our government any adequately numerous body of efficient statesmen, some to be more externally active and answer the demands of the day, others to be somewhat more retired and meditative in order that they may take thought for the morrow.
144 psl. - Because the undecided man, seeking after various counsel, necessarily multiplies confidences. The pretext for indecisiveness is commonly mature deliberation : but in reality indecisive men occupy themselves less in deliberation than others; for to him who fears to decide, deliberation (which has a foretaste of that fear) soon becomes intolerably irksome, and the mind escapes from the anxiety of it into alien themes. Or if that seems too open a dereliction of its task, it gives itself to inventing...
26 psl. - It is scarcely necessary to dwell on the necessity of caution in bestowing confidence ; it is the highest favour in your power to confer, and deliberation enhances an act of kindness just as much as it aggravates an act of malice. ' Favours which seem to be dispensed upon an impulse, with an unthinking facility, are received like the liberalities of a spendthrift, and men thank God for them.
180 psl. - I would say, that what is most conducive to good appointments in the first instance, and thenceforward to deriving benefit from them, is to offer small remuneration to the beginner, with successive expectancies proportioned to the merits which he shall manifest, and of such increasing amount as shall be calculated to keep easy, through the progressive wants of single and married life, the mind of a prudent man. Upon such a system, if unfit men belonging to influential families shall make good an...
181 psl. - It is in the nature of most men, and especially of men of lively understandings, not to be well pleased if they find themselves at the end of any decade of their lives exactly in the same position which they occupied at the beginning. In sundry of their natural advantages men suffer a sensible decline with every lapse of ten years, and they look for an advance in fortunes to indemnify them for the backslidings of nature.
75 psl. - A washing of the weary traveller's feet, A quenching of his thirst, a sweet repose Alternate and preparative, in groves Where loving much the flower that loves the shade,. And loving much the shade that that flower loves, He yet is unbewilder'd, unenslaved, Thence starting light, and pleasantly let go, When serious service calls.