| 1811 - 858 頁
...in private ; nor the gross fallacy, if it was said in a proclamation, ma moment of spleen and anger, for the purpose of stimulating the inhabitants of...provinces to greater activity, he must utterly deny the fact. There could be nothing more fallacious than to estimate the feelings of a country towards any... | |
| Walter Scott - 1811 - 860 頁
...stim .' ng the inhabitants of those prov' „ f . to greater activity, he must utu.-.'y deny the fact. There could be nothing more fallacious than to estimate...be exposed to the immediate pressure of an army. If the scene of war, for instance, lay in England, and we had an army of allies, Germans or Russians,... | |
| 1811 - 854 頁
...private ; nor the gross fallacy, if it was said in a proclamation, in a moment of spleen and anger, for the purpose of stimulating the inhabitants of...provinces to greater activity, he must utterly deny the fact. There could be nothing more fallacious than to estimate the feelings of a country towards any... | |
| William Windham, Thomas Amyot - 1812 - 452 頁
...had said it in private, or the gross fallacy of quoting what he might have said in a proclamation in a moment of spleen or anger, and for the purpose of...could be nothing more fallacious than to estimate the feeling*- ' of a country towards any cause, by the feelings excited in that part of it, which should... | |
| Great Britain. Parliament - 1812 - 624 頁
...might have said in a proclamation in a moment of spleen or anger, and for the purpose of stunulating the inhabitants of those provinces to greater activity,...nothing more fallacious than to estimate the feelings l;fa country towards any cause, by the feelings excited in that part of it, which should be exposed... | |
| Robert Southey - 1827 - 836 頁
.... . in another there was a want, not merely of generosity, but of common justice toward our allies. There could be nothing more fallacious than to estimate...be exposed to the immediate pressure of an army. If the scene of war lay in England, and we had an army of allies, or even of our own countrymen, acting... | |
| William Windham - 1837 - 678 頁
...had said it in private, or the gross fallacy of quoting what he might have said in a proclamation in a moment of spleen or anger, and for the purpose of...be exposed to the immediate pressure of an army. If the scene of war, for instance, lay in England, and we had an army of allies, Germans or Russians,... | |
| William Windham - 1837 - 694 頁
...had said it in private, or the gross fallacy of quoting what lie might have said in a proclamation in a moment of spleen or anger, and for the purpose of...be exposed to the immediate pressure of an army. If the scene of war, for instance, lay in England, and we had an army of allies, Germans or Russians,... | |
| 1845 - 698 頁
...had said it in private, or the gross fallacy of quoting what he might have said in a proclamation in a moment of spleen or anger, and for the purpose of...be exposed to the immediate pressure of an army. If the scene of war, for instance, lay in England, and we had an army of allies, Germans or Russians,... | |
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