This would soon spread much more knowledge and civility, yea, religion, through all parts of the land, by communicating the natural heat of government and culture more distributively to all extreme parts, which now lie numb and neglected ; would soon... Transactions for the first (-third) session - Side 94av Birmingham historical society - 1881Uten tilgangsbegrensning - Om denne boken
| Denis Saurat - 1925 - 388 sider
...more distributively to all extreme parts, which now lie numb and neglected; would soon make the whole nation more industrious, more ingenious at home, more...people flourishing, virtuous, noble, and high-spirited. Monarchs will never permit; whose aim is to make people wealthy indeed perhaps, and well fleeced, for... | |
| John Milton - 1927 - 208 sider
...more distributively to all extreme parts, which now lie numb and neglected; would soon make the whole nation more industrious, more ingenious at home, more...people flourishing, virtuous, noble, and highspirited. Monarchs will never permit; whose aim is to make the people wealthy indeed perhaps, and well fleeced,... | |
| John Milton - 1928 - 402 sider
...whole nation more industrious, more ingenious at home, more potent, more honorable 1 Ibid. 1. 116. abroad. To this a free commonwealth will easily assent...people flourishing, virtuous, noble, and high-spirited. l However, with all hazard I have ventured what I thought my duty, to speak in season, and to forewarn... | |
| John Milton - 1928 - 402 sider
...nation more industrious, more ingenious at home, more potent, more honorable 1 Ibid. 1. 1l6. abroad. JTo this a free commonwealth will easily assent (nay,...people flourishing, virtuous, noble, and high-spirited. l However, with all hazard I have ventured what I thought my duty, to speak in season, and to forewarn... | |
| John Milton - 1928 - 408 sider
...potent, more honorable 1 Ibid. 1. 116. abroad. To this a free commonwealth will easily assent Cnay, the Parliament hath had already some such thing in...people flourishing, virtuous, noble, and high-spirited. l However, with all hazard I have ventured what I thought my duty, to speak in season, and to forewarn... | |
| Stewart Justman - 1991 - 206 sider
...to England not to return to monarchy, Milton asserts as an argument for republican government that "of all governments a Commonwealth aims most to make the people flourishing, vertuous, noble and high spirited."8 Today, when we are apt to read On Liberty as though it asked nothing... | |
| Richard Paul Bellamy, Angus C. Ross - 1996 - 356 sider
...'the civil rights and advancements of every person according to his merit'. The general line is that 'of all governments a Commonwealth aims most to make the people flourishing, vertuous, noble and high-spirited', whereas monarchs want sycophants about them and a people that is... | |
| Karen L. Edwards - 2005 - 284 sider
...can be parsimonious, for they alone know how to refrain from (parcere) soft and corrupting luxury: for of all governments a Commonwealth aims most to make the people llonrlshing, vertuous, noble and high spirited. Monarchs will never permitt: whose aim is to make the... | |
| Blair Hoxby - 2008 - 336 sider
...proposals like the dissemination of education, he says, "a free Commonwealth will easily assent ... for of all governments a Commonwealth aims most to make the people flourishing, vertuous, noble, and high spirited" (CPW 7:384). In the second edition of his tract, Milton amplified... | |
| John Milton - 2003 - 1012 sider
...which now lie numb and neglected; would soon make the whole nation more industrious, more ingenuous at home, more potent, more honourable abroad. To this...people flourishing, virtuous, noble and high-spirited. Monarchs will never permit; whose aim is to make the people wealthy indeed perhaps, and well fleeced,... | |
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