| Samuel Taylor Coleridge - 1850 - 464 pages
...been finished cannot possibly have been renewed. " The same system, to the prevalence of which France justly ascribes all her present miseries, is that...since unknown to the practice of civilized nations." Here the connective word " also " should have followed the word " Europe." As it at present stands,... | |
| Samuel Taylor Coleridge - Ethics - 1850 - 394 pages
...been finished cannot possibly have been renewed. " The same system, to the prevalence of which France justly ascribes all her present miseries, is that...since unknown to the practice of civilized nations." Here the connective word " also " should have followed the word " Europe." As it at present stands,... | |
| William Hazlitt - France - 1852 - 466 pages
...protracted, and in more than one instance renewed. The same system, to the prevalence of which France justly ascribes all her present miseries, is that...of a nature long since unknown to the practice of civilised nations, f For the extension of this system, and for the extermination of all established... | |
| Charles James Fox - Great Britain - 1853 - 900 pages
...protracted, and in more than one instance renewed. The same system to the prevalence of which France justly ascribes all her present miseries, is that...extermination of all established governments, the revenues of France have, from year to year, and in the midst of the most unparalleled distress, been... | |
| Sir Archibald Alison - Europe - 1854 - 386 pages
...protracted, and in more than one instance renewed. The same system, to the prevalence of which France justly ascribes all her present miseries, is that...of a nature long since unknown to the practice of civilised nations. For the extension of this system, and for the extermination 336 837 of all established... | |
| Edward Baines - France - 1855 - 620 pages
...ascribes all her present miseries, has also involved Europe in a destructive warfare, of a nature long unknown to the practice of civilized nations. For the extension of this system, and the eiterminalion of all established governments, the resources of France have been lavished and exhausted.... | |
| Archibald Alison - Europe - 1860 - 702 pages
...protracted, and in more than one instance renewed. The same system, to the prevalence of which France justly ascribes all her present miseries, is that...of a nature long since unknown to the practice of civilised nations. For the extension of this system, and for the extermination of all established governments,... | |
| William Hazlitt - 1878 - 456 pages
...protracted, and in more than one instance renewed. The same system, to the prevalence of which France justly ascribes all her present miseries, is that...which has also involved the rest of Europe in a long * That is. the manifestation of a desire for peace on the part of the French Government has nothing... | |
| Ralph Olmsted Williams - Americanisms - 1897 - 262 pages
...intelligible, I repeat my foot-note above referred to: " A Lord Grenville of former days wrote of ' a long and destructive warfare, of a nature long since unknown to the practice of civilized nations.' Here, remarks Coleridge, ' the word to is absurdly used for the word in.' (' Essays on His Own Times,'... | |
| Charles Lamb, Mary Lamb - 1905 - 588 pages
...alludes a little later in the letter : — . . . "The same system, to the prevalence of which France justly ascribes all her present miseries, is that...since unknown to the practice of civilized nations." Here the connective word " also " should have followed the word " Europe." As it at present stands,... | |
| |