The Works of the Right Honourable Joseph Addison, Bind 4 |
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Side 2
Medici , in which the ingenious author gives an account of himself in his dreaming and his waking thoughts . are somewhat more than ourselves in our sleeps , and the slumber of the body ...
Medici , in which the ingenious author gives an account of himself in his dreaming and his waking thoughts . are somewhat more than ourselves in our sleeps , and the slumber of the body ...
Side 4
The corporeal union is slackened enough to give the mind more play . The soul seems gathered within herself , and recovers that spring which is broke and weakened , when she operates more in concert with the body .
The corporeal union is slackened enough to give the mind more play . The soul seems gathered within herself , and recovers that spring which is broke and weakened , when she operates more in concert with the body .
Side 11
His Latin and Greek stood him in little stead ' ; he was to give an account only of the state of his soul , whether he was of the number of the elect ; what was the occasion of his conversion ; upon what day of the month and hour of the ...
His Latin and Greek stood him in little stead ' ; he was to give an account only of the state of his soul , whether he was of the number of the elect ; what was the occasion of his conversion ; upon what day of the month and hour of the ...
Side 14
... and many families of them are established in the West Indies ; not to mention whole nations bordering on Prester John's country , and some discovered in the inner parts of America , if we may give any credit to their own writers .
... and many families of them are established in the West Indies ; not to mention whole nations bordering on Prester John's country , and some discovered in the inner parts of America , if we may give any credit to their own writers .
Side 21
There is one thing I am able to give each of them , which is , a virtuous education . I think it is Sir Francis Bacon's observation , that in a numerous family of children , the eldest is often spoiled by the prospect of an estate ...
There is one thing I am able to give each of them , which is , a virtuous education . I think it is Sir Francis Bacon's observation , that in a numerous family of children , the eldest is often spoiled by the prospect of an estate ...
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