Government and the military be prohibited, these being all taken from the scholars and common people, what ground will be found for any such partial prohibition to rest upon ? Besides, having a clear conviction that the thing is highly injurious to men,... The Chinese Repository - Seite 517herausgegeben von - 1838Vollansicht - Über dieses Buch
| Elijah Coleman Bridgman, Samuel Wells Williams - 1837 - 604 Seiten
...ground will be found for any such partial prohibition to rest upon? Besides, having a clear conviction that the thing is highly injurious to men, to permit...notwithstanding, to pervade the empire — nay, even to lay on it a duty — is conduct quite incompatible with the yet uninjured dignity of the great and illustrious... | |
| Algernon Sydney Thelwall - 1839 - 200 Seiten
...ground will be found for any such partial prohibition to rest upon ? Besides, having a clear conviction that the thing is highly injurious to men, to permit...notwithstanding, to pervade the Empire — nay, even to lay on it a duty — is conduct quite incompatible with the yet uninjured dignity of the great and illustrious... | |
| John Slade (editor of the Canton register.) - 1839 - 286 Seiten
...ground will be found for any such partial prohibition to rest upon ! Besides, having a clear conviction that the thing is highly injurious to men, to permit...notwithstanding, to pervade the empire — nay, even to lay on it a duty — is conduct quite incompatible with the yet uninjured dignity of the great and illustrious... | |
| Algernon Sydney Thelwall - 1839 - 214 Seiten
...ground will be found for any such partial prohibition to rest upon ? Besides, having a clear conviction that the thing is highly injurious to men, to permit it, notwithstanding, to pervade the Umpire — nay, even to lay on it a duty — is conduct quite incompatible with the yet uninjured dignity... | |
| 1839 - 764 Seiten
...writers. On the question of admitting opium under a duty he nobly says, ' Having a clear conviction that the thing is 'highly injurious to men, —to permit it notwithstanding, to per' vade the empire—nay even to lay on it a duty—is conduct ' quite incompatible with the yet... | |
| C. Palfrey - 1840 - 754 Seiten
...evil and injurious. Observe the noble language used on the subject;— " Having a clear conviction that the thing is highly injurious to men ; to permit it, notwithstanding, to pervade the empire,—nay, even to lay on it a duty,—is conduct quite incompatible with the yet uninjured dignity... | |
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