On the Beauties, Harmonies, And Sublimities of Nature: With Occasional ... 3

Cover On the Beauties, Harmonies, And Sublimities of Nature: With Occasional ... 3
On the Beauties, Harmonies, And Sublimities of Nature: With Occasional ... 3
Charles Bucke
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By all their country's, wishes blest I When Spring, with dewy fingers cold, Ketarns to deck their hallow'd mould ; She tb«r» shall dress a sweeter sod.
Than Faacy'a feet hate ever trod.
A few. words shall now satisfy U3* 1. It is incum- bent on the people to shew no little indulgence to princes, on two particular accounts, ^ First, — beci^use they are compelled to see through ^ctcusles, formed of other persons' eyes. And secondly, because every prince, fromHeliogabalus to JohnLaclcland; and the
...nce U> Napoleon, of France; has been almost sufibcatcid with praise.: 2. We ought to remember, that though most men, eitheir in public or in private, can chaunt the glory of liberty j it is not liberty for others, but liberty for themselves, that they so earnestly desire.
Who could brawl more intemp^ately for liberty, than the Spartans ? And yet their conduct to their slaves was enough to bring a curse upon the whole penin- sida of Greece ! In truth, most men are tyrants : and if all tyrants were kings, there would be nearly as many kings as subjects.


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