The Edinburgh Review, Volume 98A. and C. Black, 1853 |
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Page 73
... moral obligations by undertaking the government of so many subject communities- including the vast regions under the sceptre of the East India Company ; and that this obligation , having once been assumed , cannot be laid aside without ...
... moral obligations by undertaking the government of so many subject communities- including the vast regions under the sceptre of the East India Company ; and that this obligation , having once been assumed , cannot be laid aside without ...
Page 446
... moral aspect of the events and of the persons is never out of sight , and gives the predominating character to the recital . We use the word moral not solely in the restricted sense of right and wrong , but as inclusive of the whole of ...
... moral aspect of the events and of the persons is never out of sight , and gives the predominating character to the recital . We use the word moral not solely in the restricted sense of right and wrong , but as inclusive of the whole of ...
Page 522
... moral well being of mankind as a race must ul- timately depend . What is understood as yet of the training of genius and exceptional character ? How are we to recog- nise their presence and their power before it be too late , before we ...
... moral well being of mankind as a race must ul- timately depend . What is understood as yet of the training of genius and exceptional character ? How are we to recog- nise their presence and their power before it be too late , before we ...
Contents
Geschichte des Oestreichischen Hofs und Adels | 1 |
China during the War and since the Peace By | 98 |
Lives and Letters of the Devereux Earls of Essex | 132 |
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