The Works of the Right Honourable Joseph Addison, Bind 4G. Bell, 1882 |
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Side 153
... happiness which they promise themselves in another world . For whatever preju- dices and errors human nature lies under ; we find that either reason , or tradition from our first parents , has dis- covered to all people something in ...
... happiness which they promise themselves in another world . For whatever preju- dices and errors human nature lies under ; we find that either reason , or tradition from our first parents , has dis- covered to all people something in ...
Side 155
... happiness of a soul will be adequate to its nature , and that it is not endowed with any faculties which are to lie useless and unemployed . The happiness is to be the happiness of the whole man , and we may easily conceive to ourselves ...
... happiness of a soul will be adequate to its nature , and that it is not endowed with any faculties which are to lie useless and unemployed . The happiness is to be the happiness of the whole man , and we may easily conceive to ourselves ...
Side 156
... happiness . In the description of the throne of God , it represents to us all those objects which are able to gratify the senses and ima- gination . In very many places , it intimates to us all the happiness which the understanding can ...
... happiness . In the description of the throne of God , it represents to us all those objects which are able to gratify the senses and ima- gination . In very many places , it intimates to us all the happiness which the understanding can ...
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THE SPECTATOR | 1 |
On the Number Dispersion and Religion of | 13 |
FREEHOLDER PAGI | 26 |
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acquainted agreeable ants appear beauty body club consider conversation Covent Garden creatures daughter death discourse discover Divine duke of Anjou endeavour enemies English entertained eternity faculties female forbear French gentleman GEORGE BELL give greatest hand happiness head hear heart Hilpa honour human humour infinite Ironside Julius Cæsar kind king ladies late letter lion live look Lucretius Majesty manner marriage mattadors matter means mention mind nation nature Nestor never obliged observed occasion ourselves Ovid paper particular person pleased pleasure Plutarch poet present prince reader reason reign religion Rhadamanthus Roman triumph says servant Shalum short soul Spanish monarchy speak species Spectator Statius Tatler tell thee thou thought tion Tirzah tural VIRG Virgil virtue vols Whig whole woman women words writing Zilpah