| Donald Campbell - Adventure and adventurers - 1795 - 542 pages
...between them, they think themfelves of great 1 importance in the State; while the great men whole bufmcfs they are employed in, make them feel the weight of authority, and treat them with the greateft contempt : hence they become habitually fervile to their fuperiors, and by natural confequence... | |
| Donald Campbell - Adventure and adventurers - 1796 - 536 pages
...between them, they think themfelves of great importance in the State ; while the great men whofe bufmefs they are employed in, make them feel the weight of authority, and treat them with the greateft contempt : hence they become habitually fervile to their fuperiors, and by natural confequence... | |
| Donald Campbell - Adventure and adventurers - 1796 - 302 pages
...they think- themfelves of great importance in the Hate; while the great men whofe bufmefs they Stre employed in, make them feel the weight of authority, and treat them with the greateft contempt: hence they become habitually fervile to their fuperiors, and by natural confequence... | |
| Donald Campbell - 1797 - 304 pages
...between them, they think themfelves of great importance in the ftate ; while the great men whofe bufmefs they are employed in, make them feel the weight of authority, and treat them with the greateft contempt : hence they become habitually fervile to their fuperiors, and by natural confequence... | |
| Samuel Burder - Bible - 1804 - 444 pages
...are as it were the links of communication between them, they think themselves of great importance to the state, while the great men, whose business they are employed in, make them feel the weight of their authority, and treat them with the greatest contempt. Hence they become so habitually servile... | |
| Samuel Burder - 1804 - 440 pages
...are as it were the links of communication between them, they think themselves of great importance to the state, while the great men, whose business they are employed in, make them feel the weight of their authority, and treat them with ftie greatest contempt. Hence they become so habitually servile... | |
| Donald Campbell - Adventure and adventurers - 1807 - 452 pages
...them, they think themfelves of great -importance in the ftate ; while the great men whofe bufinefs they are employed in, make them feel the weight of authority, and treat them with the greateft contempt: hence they become habitually fervile to their fuperiors, and by natural confequence... | |
| R. P. Forster - Voyages and travels - 1818 - 592 pages
...authority, as a messenger belonging to the sultan. As all those men are employed by the magistrates of the country, and are, as it were, the links of communication...feel the weight of authority, and treat them with thr greatest contempt: hence they become habitually servile to their superiors, and by natural consequence... | |
| Donald Campbell - 1821 - 312 pages
...themselves of great importance in the state; while the great men whose business they are employed in.make them feel the weight of authority, and treat them...their power, they conceive to be so. As carriers of despatches, their power and authority wherever they go, is in some points undisputed ; and they can... | |
| Augustin Calmet - Bible - 1832 - 1060 pages
...as it were, the links of communication l)etween them, they think themselves of great importance to the state ; while the great men, whose business they are employed in, make them feel the weight of their authority, and treat them with the greatest contempt : hence they become habitually servile to... | |
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