The British Critic: A New Review, Volume 4F. and C. Rivington, 1815 |
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Page 5
... ment acts instantaneously , whereas the deductions of reason and experience are slow . Sentiment can repel any attack upon the finer parts of our Nature before they are thoroughly understood , and so lead us to study and esteem them ...
... ment acts instantaneously , whereas the deductions of reason and experience are slow . Sentiment can repel any attack upon the finer parts of our Nature before they are thoroughly understood , and so lead us to study and esteem them ...
Page 8
... ment , ment , somewhat more plainly and distinctly than in envy Hey's Sermons on the Malevolent Sentiments .
... ment , ment , somewhat more plainly and distinctly than in envy Hey's Sermons on the Malevolent Sentiments .
Page 9
A New Review. ment , somewhat more plainly and distinctly than in envy , though both passions are founded on competition . There is an immediate pleasure in comparative success , and an immediate pain in com- parative disappointment ...
A New Review. ment , somewhat more plainly and distinctly than in envy , though both passions are founded on competition . There is an immediate pleasure in comparative success , and an immediate pain in com- parative disappointment ...
Page 12
... ment and pardon is argued with much calmness and judgment , and such are the motives proposed for the general preference of the former , that should the offended man so far command his re- sentment as to deliberate , he would be ...
... ment and pardon is argued with much calmness and judgment , and such are the motives proposed for the general preference of the former , that should the offended man so far command his re- sentment as to deliberate , he would be ...
Page 13
... ment strictly just , may be cruel , according to the passage of the Parable now quoted , and therefore unbecoming when inflicted by frail and fallible beings . And not only cruelty may prompt us to punish , but , what seems less obvious ...
... ment strictly just , may be cruel , according to the passage of the Parable now quoted , and therefore unbecoming when inflicted by frail and fallible beings . And not only cruelty may prompt us to punish , but , what seems less obvious ...
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