| William Pitt, W. S. Hathaway - Great Britain - 1808 - 496 pages
...somc contingency, or by refusing to proceed till a thousand favourable circumstances unite together ; perhaps until we obtain the general concurrence of...improvement in policy or in morals) ; year after year escapes, and the most enormous evils go unredressed. We see this abundantly exemplified, not only in... | |
| Nathaniel Chapman - Great Britain - 1808 - 518 pages
...some contingency, or by refusing to proceed till a thousand favourable circumstances unite together ; perhaps until we obtain the general concurrence of...improvement in policy or in morals) year after year escapes, and the most enormous evils go unredressed. We see this abundantly exemplified, not only in... | |
| William Pitt - 1806 - 488 pages
...some contingency, or by refusing to proceed till a thousand favourable circumstances unite together ; perhaps until we obtain the general concurrence of...improvement in policy or in morals) ; year after year escapes, and the most enormous evils go unredressed. We see this abundantly exemplified, not only in... | |
| Peace - 522 pages
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| 1827 - 672 pages
...by refusing to proceed till a thousand favourable circumstances unite together, perhaps till we gain the general concurrence of Europe, a concurrence,...improvement in policy or in morals, year after year escapes, and the most enormous evils go unredressed. We see this abundantly exemplified, not only in... | |
| 1829 - 476 pages
...favourable circumstances unite together—perhaps till we gain the general concurrence of Europe—a concurrence which, I believe, never yet took place...improvement in policy or in morals, year after year escapes, and the most enormous evils go unredressed. We see this abundantly exemplified, not only in... | |
| John Styles, Roger Therry - 1830 - 466 pages
...refusing to proceed till a thonsand favonrable circumstances unite together — perhaps till we gain the general concurrence of Europe — a concurrence...improvement in policy or in morals, year after year escapes, and the most enormons evils go unredressed. We see this abundantly exemplified, not only in... | |
| Thomas Clarkson - Antislavery movements - 1839 - 644 pages
...contingencies, perhaps till we obtained the general concurrence of Europe, (a concurrence which he believe never yet took place at the commencement of any one improvement in policy or morals,) he feared that this most enormous evil would never be redressed. Was it not folly to wait... | |
| Robert Cochrane - Orators - 1877 - 560 pages
...some contingency, or by refusing to proceed till a thousand favourable circumstances unite together; obert Cochrane escapes, and the most enormous evils go unredressed. We see this abundantly exemplified, not only in... | |
| Robert Cochrane (miscellaneous writer) - 1877 - 558 pages
...some contingency, or by refusing to proceed till a thousand favourable circumstances unite together; t out to your attention a particular instance of it in the escapes, and the most enormous evils go uuredressed. We see this abundantly exemplified, not only in... | |
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