Political Fame |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 7
Page 11
... not our present discussion , so we leave to other pens the task of stigmatizing the Con- queror by a harsher name . Louis the Sixth of France is the next who Louis claims our attention ; the difference between his reign RIGHT AND MIGHT .
... not our present discussion , so we leave to other pens the task of stigmatizing the Con- queror by a harsher name . Louis the Sixth of France is the next who Louis claims our attention ; the difference between his reign RIGHT AND MIGHT .
Page 28
... pens deride that which wisdom has created . Nay , the very politician who has sat with his brother members satisfies his leisure ambition and the craving of angry duns by a work founded on crying down the law which his brothers and ...
... pens deride that which wisdom has created . Nay , the very politician who has sat with his brother members satisfies his leisure ambition and the craving of angry duns by a work founded on crying down the law which his brothers and ...
Page 29
... pens the very fact of his tyranny . ye poor , believe not in the happiness which Mammon confers on its favorites ; think that every thousand the rich man possesses only makes him crave for a thousand more ; know that he cannot supply ...
... pens the very fact of his tyranny . ye poor , believe not in the happiness which Mammon confers on its favorites ; think that every thousand the rich man possesses only makes him crave for a thousand more ; know that he cannot supply ...
Page 40
... pen the immortal page ; they show that they have sympathy , feelings , and thoughts , which none save the educated can possess ; the mere nobleman is unheeded , or rather the man of letters has raised the noble- man still higher . No ...
... pen the immortal page ; they show that they have sympathy , feelings , and thoughts , which none save the educated can possess ; the mere nobleman is unheeded , or rather the man of letters has raised the noble- man still higher . No ...
Page 42
... pen can be the means of public annoyance or benefit . The English constitution is as free as any man can possibly wish to see it ; laws are as lenient as they are consistent with due regard for the right of property and liberty , and ...
... pen can be the means of public annoyance or benefit . The English constitution is as free as any man can possibly wish to see it ; laws are as lenient as they are consistent with due regard for the right of property and liberty , and ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
abilities absolute monarchy ambition amidst barbarous behold beloved bounty brave breast brother members Charlemagne Charles Chartism cians civil civilian conscience contemporary courage craving Crusade Dauphin death duty English equal example eyes fact factory feeling fight forget France gentle glorious glory hand happiness heart holy honour Hugh Capet indolence justice Knights Templars lesson look Lords Louis man's Medici member of Parliament mind miseries monarch Napoleon Napoleon Bonaparte nation never noble Parliamentary walls party patriot peace pens Peter the Hermit Pharamond philanthropy Philip Augustus Philip the Third POLITICAL FAME poor popular praise Protector purest Queen Victoria Radical reign religion rich sacred Salic law Sicilian Vespers soul Sovereign spirit talent taught thee thou thread of French triumph truest truth turn tyranny untaught vast victory virtue voice warrior weapon of discontent Whig whilst Young England young politician
Popular passages
Page 45 - The world is still deceived with ornament. In law what plea so tainted and corrupt, But being season'd with a gracious voice, Obscures the show of evil ? In religion, What damned error, but some sober brow Will bless it. and approve it with a text, Hiding the grossness with fair ornament ? There is no vice so simple, but assumes Some mark of virtue on his outward parts.
Page 81 - ... life, life cannot see, Darts onward to eternity! While vacant hours of beauty roll Their magic o'er some yielded soul, Ah ! little do the happy guess, The sum of human wretchedness ; Or dream, amid the soft farewell That Time of them is taking, How frequent moans the funeral knell, What noble hearts are breaking, While myriads to their tombs descend, Without a mourner, creed, or friend!
Page 81 - A moment is a mighty thing, Beyond the soul's imagining; For in it, though we trace it not, How much there crowds of varied lot! How much of life, life cannot see, Darts onward to eternity!
Page 63 - Is there not A mood of glory, when the mind attuned To heaven, can out of dreams create her worlds ?Oh ! none are so absorb'd, as not to feel Sweet thoughts like music coming o'er the mind : When prayer, the purest incense of a soul, Hath risen to the throne of heaven, the heart Is mellow'd, and the shadows that becloud Our state of darken'd being, glide away ; The Heavens are open'd ! and the eye of Faith Looks in, and hath a fearful glimpse of God...
Page 82 - How hardly shall a rich man enter into the kingdom of heaven...
Page 63 - The calm of thought, the melody of mind ! When prayer, the purest incense of a soul, Hath risen to the throne of heaven, the heart Is mellow'd, and the shadows that becloud Our state of darken'd being, glide away ; The Heavens are open'd ! and the eye of Faith Looks in, and hath a fearful glimpse of God ! HAPPINESS OF HUMBLE LIFE.