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only to be registered, that they may not be increased; and ascertained, that they may not be confounded. Ibid. p. 66.

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Language is the dress of thought; and as the noblest mien, or most graceful action, would be degraded and obscured by a garb appropriated to the gross employments of rustics or mechanics, so the most heroic sentiments will lose their efficacy, and the most splendid ideas drop their . magnificence, if they are conveyed by words used commonly upon low and trivial occasions, debased by vulgar mouths, and contaminated by inelegant applications.

Life of Cowley.

When languages are formed upon different principles, it is impossible that the same modes of expression should always be elegant in both. Life of Dryden.

Language proceeds, like every thing else, through improvement to degeneracy. Idler, vol. 2, p. 60.

Every man is more speedily instructed by his own language than by any other.

Ibid. p. 218.

Orthography is vitiated among such as learn first to speak, and then to write, by imperfect notions of the relations between letters and vocal utterance.

Western Islands, p. 382.,

ENGLISH LANGUAGE.

There is not, perhaps, one of the liberal arts which may not be completely learned in the

English language,

Idler, vol. 2, p. 219.

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In our language two negatives did not original ly affirm, but strengthen the negation. This mode of speech was in time changed; but as the change was made in opposition to long custom, it proceeded gradually, and uniformity was not obtained but through an intermediate confusion. Notes upon Shakspeare, vol. 4, p. 346.

To our language may be, with great justness, applied the observation of Quintilian," that speech was not formed by an analogy sent from heaven." It did not descend to us in a state of uniformity and perfection, but was produced by necessity, and enlarged by accident, and is therefore composed of dissimilar parts, thrown toge ther by negligence, by affectation, by learning, or by ignorance.

Plan of an English Dictionary, p. 41. Such was the power of our language in the time of Queen Elizabeth, that a speech might be formed adequate to all the purposes of life, If the language of theology were extracted from Hooker, and the translation of the Bible; the terms of natural knowledge from Bacon; the phrases of policy, war, and navigation, from Raleigh; the dialect of poetry and fiction from Spencer and Sidney; and the diction of common life from Shakspeare, few ideas would be lost to mankind for want of English words in which they might be expressed.

Preface to Johnson's Dictionary, p. 74. The affluence and comprehension of our language is very illustriously displayed in our poetical translations of ancient writers; a work which the French seem to relinquish in despair, and which we were long unable to perform with dexterity.

Life of Dryden.

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From the time of Gower and Chaucer, the English writers have studied elegance, and advanced their language, by successive improvements, to as much harmony as it can easily receive, and as much copiousness as human knowledge has hitherto required, till every man now endeavours to excel others in accuracy, or outshine them in splendour of style; and the danger is, lest care should too soon pass to affectation.

LAWS.

Idler, vol. 2, p. 63. ·

Laws

It is, perhaps, impossible to review the laws of any country, without discovering many defects, and many superfluities. Laws often continue when their reasons have ceased. made for the first state of society, continue. unabolished when the general form of life is changed. Parts of the judicial procedure, which were at first only accidental, become, in time, essential; and formalities are accumulated on each other, till the art of litigation requires more study than the discovery of right.

Memoirs of the King of Pruffia, p. 112.

To embarrass justice by multiplicity of laws, or to hazard it by confidence in judges, seem to be the opposite rocks on which all civil institutions have been wrecked, and between which, legislative wisdom has never yet found, an open passage.

Ibid.

It is observed, that a corrupt society has many laws.

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Laws are often occasional, often capricious, made always by a few, and sometimes by a single voice.

Ibid. vol. 1, p. 60.

The first laws have no laws to enforce them→ The first authority is constituted by itself.

Falfe Alarm, p. 125

Laws that exact obedience, and yield no protection, contravene the first principles of the compact of authority.

Weftern Islands, p. 209.

A man accustomed to satisfy himself with the obvious and natural meaning of a sentence, does not easily shake off his habit; but a true-bred lawyer never contents himself with one sense, when there is another to be found.

Marmor Norfolciense, p. 48.,

PENAL LAWS.

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Death is, as one of the ancients observes," of 、 dreadful things the most dreadful." An evil beyond which nothing can be threatened by sublunary power, or feared from human enmity or vengeance. This terror, therefore, should be reserved as the last resort of authority, as the strongest and most operative of prohibitory sanctions, and placed before the treasure of life to guard from invasion what cannot be restored. To equal robbery with murder, is to reduce murder to robbery, to confound in common minds the gradations of iniquity, and incite the commission of a greater crime, to prevent the detection of a less. If only murder was punished with death, very few robbers would stain their hands in blood; but when, by

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the last act of cruelty, no new danger is incurred, and greater security may be obtained, upon what principle shall we bid them forbear?

Rambler, vol. 3, p. 51.

If those whom the wisdom of our laws has condemned to die, had been detected in their rudiments of robbery, they might by proper discipline and useful labour, have been disentangled from their habits; they might have escaped all the temptations to subsequent crimes, and passed their days in reparation and penitence. Ibid. p. 53.

LIBERTY.

A zeal, which is often thought and called liberty, sometimes disguises from the world, and not rarely from the mind which it possesses, an envious desire of plundering wealth or degrading greatness; and of which the immediate tendency is innovation and anarchy, or imperious eagerness to subvert and confound, with very little care what shall be established.

Life of Akenfide.

It has been observed that they who most loudly clamour for liberty, do not most liberally grant it.

Life of Milton.

LOYALTY.

As a man inebriated only by vapours, soon recovers in the open air, a nation discontented to madness, without any adequate cause, will return to its wits and allegiance, when a little pause has cooled it to reflection.

Falle Alarm, p. 53.

LETTER

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