Resolves, Divine, Moral, PoliticalHilliard and Brown, 1832 - 316 Seiten |
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Ergebnisse 1-5 von 19
Seite xv
... writes thus , " I am now getting a while to London , which appears to this region as the heart to the body , through which its business , as the stir- ring blood , hath all its circulation . If you have not in the country , you may have ...
... writes thus , " I am now getting a while to London , which appears to this region as the heart to the body , through which its business , as the stir- ring blood , hath all its circulation . If you have not in the country , you may have ...
Seite xviii
... writing the Resolves , and for gi ing them to the world , are as virtuous as they mu be interesting to the moralist ... writer . Spea ing of this work in one of his old prefaces , " To th Peruser , " he says , " What I aim at in it , I ...
... writing the Resolves , and for gi ing them to the world , are as virtuous as they mu be interesting to the moralist ... writer . Spea ing of this work in one of his old prefaces , " To th Peruser , " he says , " What I aim at in it , I ...
Seite xix
... write and publish them were not so much to please others , or to show any thing he had could be capable of the name of parts ; but to give the world some account how he spent his vacant hours , and that by passing the press ( they ...
... write and publish them were not so much to please others , or to show any thing he had could be capable of the name of parts ; but to give the world some account how he spent his vacant hours , and that by passing the press ( they ...
Seite 5
... write it ? Anatomize man , and you shall find there is nothing in him like it . Bones , sinews , nerves , muscles , flesh , blood , veins , and marrow , and corrupting sub- stances ; but no relic , no likeness of that which in his life ...
... write it ? Anatomize man , and you shall find there is nothing in him like it . Bones , sinews , nerves , muscles , flesh , blood , veins , and marrow , and corrupting sub- stances ; but no relic , no likeness of that which in his life ...
Seite 29
... write thus Plato never meant to banish . His own practice shows , he excluded not all . He was content to hear Antimachus recite his poem , when all the herd had left him ; and he himself wrote both tragedies and other pieces . Perhaps ...
... write thus Plato never meant to banish . His own practice shows , he excluded not all . He was content to hear Antimachus recite his poem , when all the herd had left him ; and he himself wrote both tragedies and other pieces . Perhaps ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
actions Apicius apparel Ausonius beasts believe better blood body Cæsar cast Certainly Cicero corruption creatures Cretians Croesus dance death Deity divine Domitian doth doubtless earth easy enemy envy faith fame fear Felltham fire flame fool friends give glory grow hand hate hath heart heaven hold honest honor Jews keep labor leave light ligion live look Low Countries man's mastiff ment mind morality nature neglect ness never noble offence once ourselves passion peace play pleased pleasure Plutarch poets prayer prisoner Psammeticus Rahab raoh reason religion Resolves rest Roman Saint James Saint Paul Sallust says sometimes soul speak spirit spleen sure Tacitus tell Theophrastus thing thou thought Tibullu tion tongue truth unto venom vice virtue Vitellius wealth wherein wisdom wise withal wonder
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 206 - Though prayer should be the key of the day, and the lock of the night, yet I hold it more needful in the morning, than when our bodies do take their repose.
Seite 18 - And even this world, while we are in it, ought somewhat 2 to be cared for. As those states are likely to flourish, where execution follows sound advisements, so is man, when contemplation is seconded by action. Contemplation generates ; action propagates.
Seite 93 - Nulli se dicit mulier mea nubere malle quam mihi, non si se luppiter ipse petat. dicit; sed mulier cupido quod dicit amanti, in vento et rapida scribere oportet aqua.
Seite xix - Then the master of the house being angry said to his servant, Go out quickly into the streets and lanes of the city, and bring in hither the poor, and the maimed, and the halt, and the blind.
Seite 67 - At a sermon well dressed, what understander can have a motion to sleep? Divinity, well ordered, casts forth a bait which angles the soul into the ear ; and how can that close when such a guest sits in it ? They are sermons but of baser metal, which lead the eyes to slumber. And should we...
Seite 260 - Macarius did penance for only killing a gnat in anger. Like the Jewish touch of things unclean, the least miscarriage requires purification. Man is like a watch ; if evening and morning he be not wound up with prayer •and circumspection, he is unprofitable and false ; or serves to mislead.
Seite 66 - A man can never speak too well, where he speaks not too obscure. Long and distended clauses, are both tedious to the ear, and difficult for their retaining. A sentence well couched, takes both the sense and the understanding. I love not those cart-rope speeches, that are longer than the memory of man can fathom. I see not, but that divinity, put into apt significants, might ravish as well as poetry.
Seite 77 - ... be pushed out of company. Even concealment of a fault argues some charity to the delinquent ; and when we tell him of it in secret, it shows we wish he should amend before the world comes to know he is amiss.
Seite 217 - Mihi quidem nunquam persuaderi potuit animos dum in corporibus essent mortalibus vivere, quum...
Seite 175 - A grey head with a wise mind, enriched by learning, is a treasury of grave precept, experience, and wisdom. It is an oracle, to which the lesser wise resort, to know their fate. He that can read and meditate, need not think the evening long, or life irksome; it is, at all times, a fit employment, and a particular solace to him who is bowed down with years.