te their own by their social nature,
v. 361.
their influence on the affections and passions, v. 403; vii. 44.
the most decided often stated in the form of questions, vi. 28.
the interest and duty of government to attend much to them, vii. 44.
Oppression, the poorest and most illiterate are judges of it, iv. 281.
Orange, Prince of, (afterwards William III.,) extracts from his
Declaration, iv. 147.
Ordeal, purgation by, vii. 314.
Oude, extent and government of, under Sujah ul Dowlah, xi. 373.
Pain, pleasure, and indifference, their mutual relation as states
of the mind, i. 103.
nature and cause of pain, i. 210.
how a cause of delight, i. 215.
Paine, Thomas, remarks on his character, v. iii; vi. 60.
Painting and poetry, their power, when due to imitation, and when
to sympathy, i. 123.
Pandulph, the Pope's legate, his politic dealing with King John, vii. 451.
parallel between his conduct to King John and that of the
Roman consuls to the Carthaginians in the last Punic war, vii. 453.
Papal power, uniform steadiness of it in the pursuit of its
ambitious projects, vii. 449.
Papal pretensions, sources of their growth and support, vii. 384.
Papal States, how likely to be affected by the revolution in France,
iv. 337.
Parliament, remarks on it, i. 491.
the power of dissolving it, the most critical and delicate
of all the trusts vested in the crown, ii. 553.
disadvantages of triennial parliaments, vii. 79.
Parliaments of France, character of them, iii. 505.
Parliament of Paris, observations on its subversion, xii. 396.
Parliamentary disorders, ideas for the cure of them, i. 516.
Parsimony, a leaning towards it in war may be the worst management, i. 310.
Party divisions, inseparable from free government, i. 271.
definition of the term, party, i. 530.
evils of party domination, vi. 390.
Passions, all concern either self-preservation or society, i. 110.
final cause of the difference between those belonging to
self-preservation and those which regard the society of the sexes,
i. 113.
those which belong to self-preservation turn upon pain and danger,
i. 125.
nature and objects of those belonging to society, i. 125.
a control over them necessary to the existence of society, iv. 52.
strong ones awaken the faculties, v. 287.
vehement passion not always indicative of an infirm judgment, v. 407.
mere general truths in
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