The Citizen of a Republic: What are His Rights, His Duties, and Privileges, and what Should be His EducationPaine and Burgess, 1845 - 190 sider |
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Side 23
... cause it to shine out in his public life . Finally , in all he does he must cherish the public good dearer than his own personal emolument . Reasoning upon these premises , we shall proceed to delineate the characteristics of that ...
... cause it to shine out in his public life . Finally , in all he does he must cherish the public good dearer than his own personal emolument . Reasoning upon these premises , we shall proceed to delineate the characteristics of that ...
Side 33
... cause the citizen will sometimes reason according to the political mode , and sometimes accord- ing to rhetoric , as may best suit the place , the time , and the hearers . The manner he should adopt must be a matter of study , as for ...
... cause the citizen will sometimes reason according to the political mode , and sometimes accord- ing to rhetoric , as may best suit the place , the time , and the hearers . The manner he should adopt must be a matter of study , as for ...
Side 38
... causes of their defeat — and , in a single word , he must learn in what consists the essence and the difference of a king- dom and a tyranny , of a dictatorship and an oligarchy , of a regulated commonwealth and an unruly rabble . He ...
... causes of their defeat — and , in a single word , he must learn in what consists the essence and the difference of a king- dom and a tyranny , of a dictatorship and an oligarchy , of a regulated commonwealth and an unruly rabble . He ...
Side 46
... cause in animals of receiving objects of sense . - The intellectual , a principal and formal cause in men of appreciating intelligible objects . — And the moving power , a principal and a formal cause in animate existences of moving ...
... cause in animals of receiving objects of sense . - The intellectual , a principal and formal cause in men of appreciating intelligible objects . — And the moving power , a principal and a formal cause in animate existences of moving ...
Side 64
... cause of similar public crimes , we wish to be understood as always referring to that poverty which is brought on by vice ; for indigence honored by virtue never excited its subjects to perverse schemes . Epa- minondas was a poor man ...
... cause of similar public crimes , we wish to be understood as always referring to that poverty which is brought on by vice ; for indigence honored by virtue never excited its subjects to perverse schemes . Epa- minondas was a poor man ...
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acquire advantage affairs ambassadors Aristotle Athenian battle beautiful become Cæsar Caius Verres called Cato Catullus CHAPTER cherished civil consists counsel crime danger dignity distributive justice endeavor enemy envy Epaminondas esteemed example exercise favor feel foreign princes fortune friends friendship give glory habit Hesiod honor illustrate indulge Isocrates justice King Lacedemonians laws liberality libertine liberty lofty lovers Lycurgus magistrate magnanimous magnificent manner Marcus Tully ment merit mind moderation modesty moral virtues necessary never noble occasion odium opinion passion Pericles person Phocion Plato Plutarch poet political Pompey practice praise principles proper prudence quam reason refused regard remember render replied republic Republic of Rome republican Citizen Roman Roman Republic Roman Senate Rome says Plutarch seems Senate Seneca Socrates sometimes soul speak spirit Tacitus tells Themistocles things Tibullus tion truth tyrant valor vice Volsci wealth wise worthy Xenophon
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Side 79 - Lord, before the priests and the judges, which shall be in those days; and the judges shall make diligent inquisition: and behold, if the witness be a false witness, and hath testified falsely against his brother; Then shall ye do unto him, as he had thought to have done unto his brother: so shalt thou put the evil away from among you.
Side 73 - JUSTUM et tenacem propositi virum Non civium ardor prava jubentium, Non vultus instantis tyranni Mente quatit solida, neque Auster, Dux inquieti turbidus Adriae, 5 Nee fulminantis magna manus Jovis : Si fractus illabatur orbis, * Impavidum ferient ruinae.
Side xi - is a work," says the Biblioteca Enciclopedica Italiana, "enriched with elegant learning, and written with all that terseness and solemn earnestness of style, which characterized the great writers of the brilliant ages of the republics of antiquity. The man who best restrains his appetites and lusts — who is the most prudent in public deliberations — the most Justin every private and public relation of family and of society, is, in the estimation of Ansaldo Ceba, the best citizen.
Side 161 - licet' inquit 'mihi agmina militum, quibus curiam circumsedisti, ostentes, licet mortem identidem miniteris, numquam tamen efficies ut propter exiguum senilemque sanguinem meum Marium, a quo urbs et Italia conservata est, hostem iudicem.
Side 74 - Marius quam celerrime hostis judicaretur. Cujus voluntati nullo obviam ire audente, solus Scaevola, interrogatus de hac re, sententiam dicere noluit. Quin etiam truculentius sibi...
Side 160 - Tu enim a certo sensu et vero iudicas de nobis ; quod isti ne faciant, summa malevolentia et livore impediuntur. Interpellent me, quo minus honoratus sim, dum ne interpellent, quo minus respublica a me commode administrari possit.
Side 89 - No savage mother ever put away her own child, to suckle that of another. To the cradle, consisting of thin pieces of light wood...
Side 89 - To the cradle, consisting of thin pieces of light wood, and gayly ornamented with quills of the porcupine, and beads, and rattles, the nursling is firmly attached, and carefully wrapped in furs ; and the infant, thus swathed, its back to the mother's back, is borne as the topmost...
Side 80 - ... hapless victims of his crime, the trampled laws, and the periled interests, and outraged moral sense of society. " If those tribunals, which are so ready to show compassion to the vile, would remember, that in letting one villain escape they are the immediate instruments of bringing evil directly on many innocent persons, as Pythagoras says, they would confess themselves worthy of any other name in the world rather than merciful. Let the citizen, then, beware of being deceived by the similitude...
Side iv - Entered according to the Act of Congress, in the year 1845, by PAINE & BURGESS, In the Clerk's Office of the District Court for the Southern District oi New York. SW BENEDICT, Stcrrolyncr No. 16 Sfnccc ilrcrl, Heir Yir*. TO THE HON. JOHN QUINCY ADAMS. DEAR SIR,—You have placed .jw . dei" very deep obligation by allowing me to dedicate, to.