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Side 6
... reason , he does not understand them ; and , should you wish to be bereft of his company , you cannot Homerton , July 11 , 1810 . do a better thing than sit down to read , for he will tell you it is wicked , that , if you must read ...
... reason , he does not understand them ; and , should you wish to be bereft of his company , you cannot Homerton , July 11 , 1810 . do a better thing than sit down to read , for he will tell you it is wicked , that , if you must read ...
Side 7
... reason , and excited by Hannibal , who , whithersoever he went , breathed his hatred against Rome , and joined to the solicitation of Thoas , king of the Etolians , Antiochus declared war against Rome ; but which utterly failed on ...
... reason , and excited by Hannibal , who , whithersoever he went , breathed his hatred against Rome , and joined to the solicitation of Thoas , king of the Etolians , Antiochus declared war against Rome ; but which utterly failed on ...
Side 16
... reason , could another , appears to him of very little so misuse a portion of his life as to consequence . On giving his cast off employ it in reading . It was , at mistress a few hundred pounds , he length , hinted to him , by a very ...
... reason , could another , appears to him of very little so misuse a portion of his life as to consequence . On giving his cast off employ it in reading . It was , at mistress a few hundred pounds , he length , hinted to him , by a very ...
Side 17
... reason , we should find the yoke of obedience an agreeable weight ; since obeying them we should but submit our will to reason , and act like those intelligent beings we know ourselves to be . And that , generally speaking , the women ...
... reason , we should find the yoke of obedience an agreeable weight ; since obeying them we should but submit our will to reason , and act like those intelligent beings we know ourselves to be . And that , generally speaking , the women ...
Side 18
... reason ; the same title over the whole creation . But that is a more generous kind of brute than those we are speaking of , though to exert it's not quite so fierce and ungovernable ; and therefore scorns strength , where it finds too ...
... reason ; the same title over the whole creation . But that is a more generous kind of brute than those we are speaking of , though to exert it's not quite so fierce and ungovernable ; and therefore scorns strength , where it finds too ...
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Adam appear army attention become body brought called cause character command common conduct consequence considerable considered continued course death ditto effect equal eyes father feel French give given hand happy head heard heart honour hope human interest Italy kind king known land late learned leave length less letter live look Lord manner master means ment merchant mind nature never object observed occasion officers opinion passed persons piece possession present produced reason received remain respect seems share side society soon street taken thing thou thought tion UNIVERSAL virtue vols whole wish young
Populære passager
Side 483 - Upon his word I entered the gate, and came up to the Cofferer's chamber, where I found all the ladies weeping bitterly. He...
Side 353 - I shall never envy the honours which wit and learning obtain in any other cause, if I can be numbered among the writers who have given ardour to virtue, and confidence to truth.
Side 385 - As one who, long in populous city pent, Where houses thick and sewers annoy the air, Forth issuing on a summer's morn, to breathe Among the pleasant villages and farms Adjoin'd, from each thing met conceives delight ; The smell of grain, or tedded grass, or kine, Or dairy, each rural sight, each rural sound...
Side 98 - Of devisors of false news and of horrible and false lies, of prelates, dukes, earls, barons, and other nobles and great men of the realm ; and also of the chancellor, treasurer, clerk of the privy seal, steward of the king's house, justices of the one bench or of the other, and of other great officers of the realm...
Side 481 - , and then discoursed with me of her indisposition, and that her heart had been sad and heavy for ten or twelve days, and in her discourse she fetched not so few as forty or fifty great sighs. I...
Side 483 - This that I heard with my ears, and did see with my eyes, I thought it my duty to set down, and to affirm it for a truth, upon the faith of a Christian ; because I know there have been many false lies reported of the end and death of that good lady.
Side 483 - I went in with them, and sat upon my knees, full of tears to see that heavy sight. Her Majesty lay upon her back, with one hand in the bed, and the other without. The Bishop kneeled...
Side 327 - Give me my scallop-shell of quiet, My staff of faith to walk upon. My scrip of joy, immortal diet, My bottle of salvation, My gown of glory, hope's true gage; And thus I'll take my pilgrimage.
Side 513 - Ireland, with part i of An historical address on the calamities occasioned by foreign influence in the nomination of Bishops to Irish Sees...
Side 426 - Foley, were of great use in completely securing the advantages gained. Every exertion was now made to get the convoy out of the river; but it being almost low water, it was late in the evening before they could be got afloat, and much labour and fatigue was occasioned, being obliged to shift the cargoes into smaller vessels to get them over the bar.