The Works of the Right Honourable Joseph Addison, Bind 4Bohn, 1866 |
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Side ii
... virtue , after a long and disastrous separation , during which wit had been led astray by profligacy , and virtue by fanaticism . ” — Macaulay . OF THE RIGHT HONOURABLE JOSEPH ADDISON . WITH NOTES BY.
... virtue , after a long and disastrous separation , during which wit had been led astray by profligacy , and virtue by fanaticism . ” — Macaulay . OF THE RIGHT HONOURABLE JOSEPH ADDISON . WITH NOTES BY.
Side 13
... virtue to extirpate the affections of the mind , but to regulate them . It may moderate and restrain , but was not designed to banish gladness from the heart of man . Religion contracts the circle of our pleasures , but leaves it wide ...
... virtue to extirpate the affections of the mind , but to regulate them . It may moderate and restrain , but was not designed to banish gladness from the heart of man . Religion contracts the circle of our pleasures , but leaves it wide ...
Side 25
... virtue , to qualify a human soul for the enjoyment of a separate state . For this reason , as they recommended moral duties to qualify and season the will for a future life , so they prescribe several contemplations and sciences to rec ...
... virtue , to qualify a human soul for the enjoyment of a separate state . For this reason , as they recommended moral duties to qualify and season the will for a future life , so they prescribe several contemplations and sciences to rec ...
Side 27
... virtue , but to their reputation . It is enough to show the weakness of this reason , which palliates guilt without removing it , that every man who is influenced by it declares himself in effect an infamous hypocrite , prefers the ...
... virtue , but to their reputation . It is enough to show the weakness of this reason , which palliates guilt without removing it , that every man who is influenced by it declares himself in effect an infamous hypocrite , prefers the ...
Side 33
... virtue , that whoever did eat it should be skilled in the language of birds , and understand everything they said to one another . Whether the dervise above - mentioned might not have eaten such a serpent , I shall leave to the ...
... virtue , that whoever did eat it should be skilled in the language of birds , and understand everything they said to one another . Whether the dervise above - mentioned might not have eaten such a serpent , I shall leave to the ...
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