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" ... like an organized police. He would be surprised at the fluctuation and instability of the civil institutions. He would find it difficult to comprehend how a nation could subsist in such disorder... "
Universal Geography: Or A Description of All Parts of the World, on a New ... - Page 431
by Conrad Malte-Brun - 1827
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An account of the kingdom of Caubul and its dependencies in Persia, Tartary ...

Mountstuart Elphinstone (hon.) - 1815 - 744 pages
...into the society, he would notice the absence of regular courts of justice, and of every thing like an organized police. He would be surprised at the...institutions. He would find it difficult to comprehend how a nation could subsist in such disorder ; and would pity those, who were compelled to pass their days...
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The Asiatic Journal and Monthly Miscellany, Volume 2

1816 - 846 pages
...into their society, he would notice the absence of regular courts of justice, and of every thing like an organized police. He would be surprised at the...institutions. He would find it difficult to comprehend how a nation could subsist in such disorder; and would pity those who were compelled to pass their days in...
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The Augustan review, Volume 3

1816 - 676 pages
...entered into society, he would notice the absence of regular courts of justice, and of every thing like an organized police. He would be surprised at the...institutions. He would find it difficult to comprehend how a nation could subsist in such disorder; and would pity those, who were compelled to pass their days...
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The European Magazine, and London Review, Volume 70

1816 - 612 pages
...entered into society, he would notice the absence of regular courts of justice, and of every thing like an organized police; he would be surprised at the...institutions: he would find it difficult to comprehend how a nation could subsist in such disorder, and would pity those who were compelled to pass their days in...
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The Eclectic review. vol. 1-New [8th], Volume 5

1816 - 658 pages
...absence of regular courts of justice, and of every thing like an organized police. He would be surprized at the fluctuation and instability of the civil institutions. He would find it difficult to comprehend how a nation could subsist in such disorder; and would pity those who were compelled to pass their days in...
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Universal geography, or A description of all the parts of the world, Volume 2

Malthe Conrad Bruun - 1822 - 686 pages
...countenances, their long beards, loose garments, and shaggy mantles of skins. He would notice the absence of courts of justice, and an organized police. He would...would pity those who were compelled to pass their « 1 their unhappy situation to fraud and violence, rapine, deceit, and revenge. Yet he would scarcely...
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Sketches of the Earth and Its Inhabitants: With One Hundred Engravings, Volume 2

Joseph Emerson Worcester - 1823 - 512 pages
...into the society, he would notice the absence of regular courts of justice, and of every thing like an organized police. He would be surprised at the...institutions. He would find it difficult to comprehend how a nation could subsist in such disorder ; and would pity those, who were compelled to pass their days...
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A Geographical View of the World: Embracing the Manners, Customs, and ...

Sir Richard Phillips - 1826 - 480 pages
...into the society, he would notice the absence of regular courts of justice, and of every thing like an organized police. He would be surprised at the...institutions. He would find it difficult to comprehend how a nation could subsist in such disorder ; and would pity those, who were compelled to pass their days...
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Universal Geography: Or, A Description of All Parts of the World, on a New ...

Conrad Malte-Brun - 1829 - 552 pages
...their sun-burned countenances, their long beards, loose garments, and shaggy mantles of skins. He woidd notice the absence of our courts of justice and an...fluctuation and instability of the civil institutions. Ho would find it difficult to comprehend how a native could subsist in such disorder, and would pity...
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An Historical and Descriptive Account of Persia: From the Earliest Ages to ...

James Baillie Fraser - 1834 - 480 pages
...into the society, he would notice the absence of regular courts of justice, and of every thing like an organized police. He would be surprised at the...institutions. He would find -it difficult to comprehend how a nation could subsist in such disorder ; and would pity those who were compelled to pass their days...
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