The Edinburgh Review, Volume 10A. and C. Black, 1807 |
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Página 10
... talents of the nation were set at liberty , and rose , by their natural buoyancy , to the higher regions of the state . The ruin and confusion which it produced , did not prevent this effect from taking place ; and whatever the nation ...
... talents of the nation were set at liberty , and rose , by their natural buoyancy , to the higher regions of the state . The ruin and confusion which it produced , did not prevent this effect from taking place ; and whatever the nation ...
Página 11
... talents ; but he may inherit it , without any other dispositions than those of squandering and improvidence . The case is pre- cisely the same as to public functions and political power . In regular and established governments , they ...
... talents ; but he may inherit it , without any other dispositions than those of squandering and improvidence . The case is pre- cisely the same as to public functions and political power . In regular and established governments , they ...
Página 12
... talents by which men could be qualified for public situations ; and , for several centuries , the Continent of ... talent and intelligence much more rapidly than in political influence , came to be ranged in some measure in hostility to ...
... talents by which men could be qualified for public situations ; and , for several centuries , the Continent of ... talent and intelligence much more rapidly than in political influence , came to be ranged in some measure in hostility to ...
Página 13
... talents in the highest situations ; and appointing the officers of government , if not with a view to the good of the governed , at least with a view to the duties which they had to perform . Every antient ground of exclusion was ...
... talents in the highest situations ; and appointing the officers of government , if not with a view to the good of the governed , at least with a view to the duties which they had to perform . Every antient ground of exclusion was ...
Página 14
... talent , is too obvious to ftand in need of illuftra- tion ; but by far the most formidable obstruction to the free use of our intellectual resources , arises from the peculiar nature of our popular constitution , and the general ...
... talent , is too obvious to ftand in need of illuftra- tion ; but by far the most formidable obstruction to the free use of our intellectual resources , arises from the peculiar nature of our popular constitution , and the general ...
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