Memoirs of Benjamin Franklin, Band 1Harper & brothers, 1839 |
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Seite 15
... consider- ed as a condition or circumstance , without which this happiness cannot be tasted pure and unabated . Virtue is the best preservation of health , as it prescribes temperance , and such a regulation of our passions as is most ...
... consider- ed as a condition or circumstance , without which this happiness cannot be tasted pure and unabated . Virtue is the best preservation of health , as it prescribes temperance , and such a regulation of our passions as is most ...
Seite 17
... considering what to answer , when Socrates continued : If you design to make the fortune of one of your friends , you will endeavour to make him rich , and thus , perhaps , you will make it your business to enrich the republic ? ' " I ...
... considering what to answer , when Socrates continued : If you design to make the fortune of one of your friends , you will endeavour to make him rich , and thus , perhaps , you will make it your business to enrich the republic ? ' " I ...
Seite 21
... consider your abilities and your duty with more attention , and let not slip the occasions of serving the republic , and of rendering it , if possible , more flourishing than it is . This will be a blessing whose influence will descend ...
... consider your abilities and your duty with more attention , and let not slip the occasions of serving the republic , and of rendering it , if possible , more flourishing than it is . This will be a blessing whose influence will descend ...
Seite 25
... consider some of the virtues singly . If a man has no inclination to wrong people in his dealings , if he feels no temptation to it , and , therefore , never does it , can it be said that he is not a just man ? If he is a just man , has ...
... consider some of the virtues singly . If a man has no inclination to wrong people in his dealings , if he feels no temptation to it , and , therefore , never does it , can it be said that he is not a just man ? If he is a just man , has ...
Seite 41
... consider- ably towards the ocean at the end of our earth , it must then finish its course , be extinguished in the waters that surround us , and leave the world in cold and darkness , necessarily producing universal death and ...
... consider- ably towards the ocean at the end of our earth , it must then finish its course , be extinguished in the waters that surround us , and leave the world in cold and darkness , necessarily producing universal death and ...
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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