| Louis François de Bausset (card, bp. of Alais.) - 1810 - 378 trang
...shed a lustre upon the age in which he lived, by his talents, his virtues, and his writings, which will endure as long as the language in which they are written. Such men had begun to be rare in every country, and the name of Fenelon was, perhaps, the only one... | |
| 1812 - 822 trang
...shed a lustre upon the age in which he lived, by his talents, his virtues, and his writing«, which will endure as long as the language in which they are written. Such men had begun to be rare in every country, and the name of Fenelon was, perhaps, theonly one at... | |
| 1817 - 590 trang
...revolution in Mr. Burke's judgment, we know; he himself having recorded his opinion in works which will endure as long as the language in which they are written ; and the converse of that proposition is now distinctly and decidedly to be maintained. The three... | |
| The Westminster Review.Volume II.July-October,1824 - 1824 - 582 trang
...revolution in Mr. Burke's judgment, we know ; he himself having recorded his opinion in works which will endure as long as the language in which they are written ; and the converse of that proposition is now distinctly and decidedly to be maintained. (1) The three... | |
| Edmund Burke - 1825 - 1096 trang
...shed a lustre upon the age in which he lived, by his talents, his virtues, and his writings, which will endure as long as the language in which they are written. Such men had begun to be rare in every country, and the name of Fenelon was, perhaps, the only one... | |
| 1829 - 418 trang
...monument of his fame is in the volumes of Burrow and Cowper and Douglass, which we may fondly hope will endure as long as the language, in which they are written, shall continue to instruct mankind. I have been drawn into these remarks on the character of Lord Mansfield,... | |
| Robert Southey - 1832 - 452 trang
...revolution in Mr. Burke's judgement, we know; he himself having recorded his opinion in works which will endure as long as the language in which they are written ; and the converse of that proposition is now distinctly and decidedly to be maintained. The three... | |
| Joseph Story - 1835 - 558 trang
...monument of his fame is in the volumes of Burrow, and Cowper, and Douglass, which we may fondly hope will endure as long as the language, in which they are written, shall continue to instruct mankind. I have been drawn into these remarks on the character of Lord Mansfield,... | |
| Freeman Hunt - 1842 - 612 trang
...little volume have been written within the last five or six years — some of them merely as parta of a larger one planned by the author, which may possibly...truth, poetry, and nature have an abiding place on thia teiregtial globe. 14. — Lift and Writing! of Ebrnezer Porter Mason : interxptrtrd tcith Hints... | |
| John Howard Hinton - 1850 - 1008 trang
...monument of his fame is in the volumes of Burrows and Cowper and Douglas, which, we may fondly hope, will endure as long as the language in which they are written shall continue to instruct mankind." An address delivered before the members of the Suffolk bar, at... | |
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