| Charles Wentworth Upham - 1835 - 350 pages
...happened unto them in their former expectations, and, instead thereof, something rising up that seems rather accommodated to the private and selfish interest of a particular part (in comparison), than truly adequate to the common good and concern of the whole body engaged in this... | |
| Jared Sparks - 1835 - 436 pages
...happened unto them in their former expectations, and, instead thereof, something rising up that seems rather accommodated to the private and selfish interest of a particular part (in comparison), than truly adequate to the common good and concern of the whole body engaged in this... | |
| 1838 - 434 pages
...happened unto them in their former expectations,and, insteadthereof, something rising up that seems rather accommodated to the private and selfish interest of a particular part (in comparison), than truly adequate to the common good and concern of the whole body engaged in this... | |
| Jared Sparks - 1839 - 436 pages
...happened unto them in their former expectations, and, instead thereof, something rising up, that seems rather accommodated to the private and selfish interest of a particular part, (in comparison,) than truly adequate to the common good and concern of the whole body engaged in this... | |
| Bartholomew Elliott G. Warburton - 1849 - 588 pages
...Cavaliers were reproached by the Boundheads with the vices of their basest comrades — that seems rather accommodated to the private and selfish interest of a particular part, " than to the common good." But of all others, " Cromwell was the Achan who had taken of the accursed thing."*... | |
| Eliot Warburton - 1849 - 562 pages
...Cavaliers were reproached by the Roundheads with the vices of their basest comrades — that seems rather accommodated to the private and selfish interest of a particular part, " than to the common good." But of all others, " Cromwell was the Achan who had taken of the accursed thing."*... | |
| Jared Sparks - 1856 - 434 pages
...happened unto them in their former expectations, and, instead thereof, something rising up that seems rather' accommodated to the private and selfish interest of a particular part (in comparison), than truly adequate to the common good and concern of the whole body engaged in this... | |
| John Forster - 1862 - 432 pages
...having happened unto them intheirformerexpectations,and, instead thereof, something rising up that seems rather accommodated to the private and selfish interest of a particular part (in comparison), than truly adequate to the common good and concern of the whole body engaged in this... | |
| George Godfrey Cunningham - 1863 - 846 pages
...decide? This tract, however, though thus mild and temperate in its structure, was not entirely without passages that might give offence to the present government....that seemed rather accommodated to the private and selhsh interest of a particular part, than truly adequate to the demands of the common interest and... | |
| William Wotherspoon Ireland - 1905 - 612 pages
...and in the appendix to Forster's British Statesman, Sir Henry Vane, vol. iv. A HEALING QUESTION 375 accommodated to the private and selfish interest of a particular part than truly adequate to the common good. " Hence it is," the writer goes on, " if these breaches be not timely healed, and the... | |
| |