ure malice
The tragedy of Don Carlos
The worst were encouraged with their
good success
The history of the Netherlands is
history of liberty
The great ocean was but a Spanish lake
The divine speciality of a few
transitory mortals
The sapling was to become the tree
The nation which deliberately carves
itself in pieces
The expenses of James's household
The Catholic League and the Protestant
Union
The blaze of a hundred and fifty
burning vessels
The magnitude of this wonderful
sovereign's littleness
The defence of the civil authority
against the priesthood
The assassin, tortured and torn by four
horses
The Gaul was singularly unchaste
The vivifying becomes afterwards the
dissolving principle
The bad Duke of Burgundy, Philip
surnamed "the Good,"
The greatest crime, however, was to be
rich
The more conclusive arbitration of
gunpowder
The disunited provinces
The noblest and richest temple of the
Netherlands was a wreck
The voice of slanderers
The calf is fat and must be killed
The illness was a convenient one
The egg had been laid by Erasmus,
hatched by Luther
The perpetual reproductions of history
The very word toleration was to sound
like an insult
The most thriving branch of national
industry (Smuggler)
The pigmy, as the late queen had been
fond of nicknaming him
The slightest theft was punished with
the gallows
The art of ruling the world by doing
nothing
The wisest statesmen are prone to
blunder in affairs of war
The Alcoran was less cruel than the
Inquisition
The People had not been invented
The small children diminished rapidly
in numbers
The busy devil of petty economy
The record of our race is essentially
unwritten
The truth in shortest about matters of
importance
The time for reasoning had passed
The effect of energetic, uncompromising
calumny
The evils resulting from a confederate
system of government
The vehicle is often prized more than
the freight
The faithful servant is always a
perpetual ass
The dead men of the place are my
intimate friends
The loss of hair, which brings on
premature decay
The personal gifts which are nature's
passport everywhere
The nation is as much bound to be
honest as is the individual
The fellow mixes blood with his colors!
Their existence depended on war
Their own roofs were not quite yet in a
blaze
Theological hatred was in full blaze
throug
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