| William Smyth - France - 1855 - 590 pages
...degrading, unseemly, unmanly, and often most unwholesome occupations, to which, by the social economy, so many wretches are inevitably doomed. If it were not generally pernicious to disturb the natural course of things, and to impede, in any degree, the great wheel of circulation,... | |
| Edmund Burke - Reference - 1877 - 466 pages
...unmanly, and often most unwholesome and pestiferous occupations, to which by the social ceconomy so many wretches are inevitably doomed. If it were not generally pernicious to disturb the natural course of things, and to impede, in any degree, the great wheel of circulation... | |
| Edmund Burke - Great Britain - 1901 - 588 pages
...unseemly, unmanly, and often most unwholesome and pestiferous occupations to which by the social economy so many wretches are inevitably doomed. If it were not generally pernicious to disturb the natural course of things, and to impede in any degree the great wheel of circulation which... | |
| Edmund Burke - Aesthetics - 1909 - 472 pages
...many wretches are inevitably doomed. If it were not generally pernicious to disturb the natural course of things, and to impede in any degree, the great wheel of circulation which is turned by the strangely-directed labour of these unhappy people, I should be infinitely more inclined forcibly to... | |
| Edmund Burke - Aesthetics - 1909 - 458 pages
...unmanly, and often most unwholesome and pestiferous occupations, to which by the social economy so many wretches are inevitably doomed. If it were not generally pernicious to disturb the natural course of things, and to impede in any degree, the great wheel of circulation which... | |
| Charles William Eliot - Literature - 1909 - 470 pages
...unmanly, and often most unwholesome and pestiferous occupations, to which by the social economy so many wretches are inevitably doomed. If it were not generally pernicious to disturb the natural course of things, and to impede in any degree, the great wheel of circulation which... | |
| Bernard Muscio - Fatigue - 1920 - 338 pages
...unmanly, and often most unwholesome and pestiferous occupations, to which by the social economy so many wretches are inevitably doomed. If it were not generally pernicious to disturb the natural course of things, and to impede, in any degree, the great wheel of circulation,... | |
| Edmund Burke - 1925 - 552 pages
...unmanly, and often most unwholesome and pestiferous occupations, to which by the social economy so many wretches are inevitably doomed. If it were not generally pernicious to disturb the natural course of things, and to impede, in any degree, the great wheel of circulation... | |
| A. J. Ayer - Biography & Autobiography - 1990 - 210 pages
...unmanly, and often most unwholesome and pestiferous occupations, to which by the social economy so many wretches are inevitably doomed. If it were not generally pernicious to disturb the natural course of things, and to impede, in any degree, the great wheel of circulation... | |
| Francis Canavan - Business & Economics - 1995 - 212 pages
...accepts their sad lot as inevitable: If it were not generally pernicious to disturb the natural course of things, and to impede, in any degree, the great wheel of circulation which is turned by the strangely-directed labour of these unhappy people, I should be infinitely more inclined forcibly to... | |
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