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Relation Between Political Phiosophy and Moralty Book I
4.284
No sooner does history become more precise than we are presented with the four great
monarchies, that is, with four successful projects, by means of bloodshed, violence and murder, of
enslaving mankind. The expeditions of Cambyses against Egypt, of Darius against the Scythians,
and of Xerxes against the Greeks, seem almost to set credibility at defiance by the fatal
consequences with which they were attended. The conquests of Alexander cost innumerable lives,
and the immortality of Caesar is computed to have been purchased by the death of one million
two hundred thousand men.
monarchies, that is, with four successful projects, by means of bloodshed, violence and murder, of
enslaving mankind. The expeditions of Cambyses against Egypt, of Darius against the Scythians,
and of Xerxes against the Greeks, seem almost to set credibility at defiance by the fatal
consequences with which they were attended. The conquests of Alexander cost innumerable lives,
and the immortality of Caesar is computed to have been purchased by the death of one million
two hundred thousand men.
No sooner does history become more precise than we are presented with the four great
monarchies, that is, with four successful projects, by means of bloodshed, violence and murder, of
enslaving mankind. The expeditions of Cambyses against Egypt, of Darius against the Scythians,
and of Xerxes against the Greeks, seem almost to set credibility at defiance by the fatal
consequences with which they were attended. The conquests of Alexander cost innumerable lives,
and the immortality of Caesar is computed to have been purchased by the death of one million
two hundred thousand men.
monarchies, that is, with four successful projects, by means of bloodshed, violence and murder, of
enslaving mankind. The expeditions of Cambyses against Egypt, of Darius against the Scythians,
and of Xerxes against the Greeks, seem almost to set credibility at defiance by the fatal
consequences with which they were attended. The conquests of Alexander cost innumerable lives,
and the immortality of Caesar is computed to have been purchased by the death of one million
two hundred thousand men.
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