Memoirs of Benjamin Franklin, Band 1Harper & brothers, 1839 |
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Seite 17
... become absolute , you will be able to serve your friends , you will raise your family , you will extend the bounds of your country , you will be known , not only in Athens , but through all Greece , and per- haps your renown will fly ...
... become absolute , you will be able to serve your friends , you will raise your family , you will extend the bounds of your country , you will be known , not only in Athens , but through all Greece , and per- haps your renown will fly ...
Seite 27
... become natu- ral , are apt to break their banks . If one servant is more valuable than another , has he not more merit than the other ? and yet this is not on account of superior self - denial . Is a patriot not praiseworthy if public ...
... become natu- ral , are apt to break their banks . If one servant is more valuable than another , has he not more merit than the other ? and yet this is not on account of superior self - denial . Is a patriot not praiseworthy if public ...
Seite 29
... become the care of great men , and laboured in by the poten- tates of the world , namely , emperors , kings , prin- ces , & c . Mathematical demonstrations are a logic of as " much or more use than that commonly learned at schools 3 ...
... become the care of great men , and laboured in by the poten- tates of the world , namely , emperors , kings , prin- ces , & c . Mathematical demonstrations are a logic of as " much or more use than that commonly learned at schools 3 ...
Seite 31
... becomes of some conse- quence to obtain the one kind and avoid the other ; for , whether real or imaginary , pain is pain and pleasure is pleasure . If we can sleep without dreaming , it is well that painful dreams are avoid- ed . If ...
... becomes of some conse- quence to obtain the one kind and avoid the other ; for , whether real or imaginary , pain is pain and pleasure is pleasure . If we can sleep without dreaming , it is well that painful dreams are avoid- ed . If ...
Seite 33
... become putrid , can be thrown off . Nature expels them by the pores of the skin and the lungs , and in a free , open air they are carried off ; but in a close room we receive them again and again , though they become more and more ...
... become putrid , can be thrown off . Nature expels them by the pores of the skin and the lungs , and in a free , open air they are carried off ; but in a close room we receive them again and again , though they become more and more ...
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acquainted affairs America appear become body called Catania cause centrifugal force clouds cold conductors continue David Hartley dear friend degree descending earth earthquakes endeavour England equal esteem farther favour fire fluid force Francis Hopkinson FRANKLIN give Glaucon globe gout hand happiness heat Hence honour hope imagine industry kind letter king king's counsel labour land late leave less light live Lord Kames Marquis de Lafayette matter ment mind motion nation nature necessary never New-York obliged observed occasion opinion paper Parliament particles pass Passy perhaps person Philadelphia Philosophical pleasure Poor Richard says present punishment pyrites quantity reason received rising river salt seawater Socrates soon spiracles spout Star Chamber suppose surface things thought tion vapour virtue warm whirl whirlwind wind wish write