Page:Modern Literature Volume 3 (1804).djvu/155

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  • ceived such intellectual and moral improvement

might result from the dissemination of liberty, as would prevent the frequent recurrence of wars. Though he disapproved of Price's exultation over the fallen monarch, as indiscreet and liable to misconstruction, yet he himself derived it from a liberal spirit and comprehensive benevolence; which regarding an individual on the one hand, and twenty-five millions of individuals on the other, preferred the happiness which he conceived to be attained by the many to the power which he saw to be wrested from the one. He therefore approved of the motives and spirit of Price, without implicitly assenting to his positions. Such was the state of his political sentiments when Burke produced his extra-*ordinary work. Captivated by the poetry, and charmed by the eloquence of this wonderful production, he in his