| James Kendall Hosmer - 1890 - 856 pages
...the Supreme, who distrusts the security of England. We all willingly yield the palm of sovereignty to your unrivalled ability and virtue, except the few among us who do not know that nothing in the world is more pleasing to God than that the supreme power should be... | |
| James Kendall Hosmer - 1890 - 452 pages
...the Supreme, who distrusts the security of England. We all willingly yield the palm of sovereignty to your unrivalled ability and virtue, except the few among us who do not know that nothing in the world is more pleasing to God than that the supreme power should be... | |
| Aristotle, William Lambert Newman - 1902 - 660 pages
...ката Trpttrßfiav ¿orín, Srrtp «W! where we read, ' We all willingly yield the palm of sovereignty to your unrivalled ability and virtue, except the few among us who are either ... or who do not know that nothing in the world is more pleasing to God, more agreeable... | |
| John Milton - 1928 - 402 pages
...government and to save the country. We all willingly yield the palm of sovereignty to your unrivaled ability and virtue, except the few among us who, either ambitious of honors which they have not the capacity to sustain, or who envy those which are conferred on one more... | |
| John Milton, James Augustus St. John - 1871 - 566 pages
...to conduct the government, and to save the country. We all willingly yield the palm of sovereignty to your unrivalled ability and "virtue, except the...ambitious of honours which they have not the capacity to sustain, or who envy those which are conferred on one more worthy than themselves, or else who do not... | |
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