The Student, Or, The Oxford and Cambridge Monthly Miscellany, Volumen1 |
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Página 174
Those , who have not experienced the changes of fortune , are but ill judges of
the difficulty it is to those , who have spent the former part of their lives in ease
and affluence , to reconcile themselyes to stations of drudgery and servitude .
Those , who have not experienced the changes of fortune , are but ill judges of
the difficulty it is to those , who have spent the former part of their lives in ease
and affluence , to reconcile themselyes to stations of drudgery and servitude .
Página 214
First , I ' ll never love any woman ; for upon seeing an inchanting beauty , I ' ll
immediately say to myself , those cheeks will one day be wrinkled , those eyes
lose their lustre , those round breasts be Aabby , and those fine curling locks give
way ...
First , I ' ll never love any woman ; for upon seeing an inchanting beauty , I ' ll
immediately say to myself , those cheeks will one day be wrinkled , those eyes
lose their lustre , those round breasts be Aabby , and those fine curling locks give
way ...
Página 253
Means must ever be conformable to their ends ; when those differ , the other
cannot be alike . IV . The happiness or misery from any object or event is
univerfally in a compound ratio of the good or evil in such object and event and
the ...
Means must ever be conformable to their ends ; when those differ , the other
cannot be alike . IV . The happiness or misery from any object or event is
univerfally in a compound ratio of the good or evil in such object and event and
the ...
Página 327
Human laws , as we have already observ ' d , were notoriously defective in those
two points ; they neither suited the punishment to the transgreffon , nor could they
, supposing them to have actually assigned and propor . tioned the penalty to ...
Human laws , as we have already observ ' d , were notoriously defective in those
two points ; they neither suited the punishment to the transgreffon , nor could they
, supposing them to have actually assigned and propor . tioned the penalty to ...
Página 366
Therefore to suppose mankind as much under the influence of the benevolent
principle as they are of those which stand opposed to it , we are oblig ' d to make
a further supposition , viz . that it is not only of equal strength and efficacy with ...
Therefore to suppose mankind as much under the influence of the benevolent
principle as they are of those which stand opposed to it , we are oblig ' d to make
a further supposition , viz . that it is not only of equal strength and efficacy with ...
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Términos y frases comunes
affection againſt appear beauty body Book cauſe charms continued dear deſign deſire eyes face fair fame father favour fear fire firſt give grace hand happineſs happy head heart himſelf honour hope houſe human juſt kind King lady laſt late laws learned leave letter light live look lord manner means mind moſt muſt myſelf nature never night obſerve once pain particular perſon pleaſe pleaſure poor preſent publick reaſon received religion riſe ſaid ſame ſay ſcene ſee ſenſe ſeveral ſhall ſhe ſhould ſince ſome ſoul ſpeak ſtill STUDENT ſubject ſuch tell thee themſelves theſe thing thoſe thou thought thro told true turn Univerſity uſe virtue whole whoſe young
Pasajes populares
Página 341 - Marvellous things did he in the sight of their fathers, in the land of Egypt, in the field of Zoan.
Página 340 - And Lot lifted up his eyes, and beheld all the plain of Jordan, that it was well watered every where, before the LORD destroyed Sodom and Gomorrah, even as the garden of the LORD, like the land of Egypt, as thou comest unto Zoar.
Página 193 - Skill'd every soft attraction to employ, Each flattering hope, and each alluring joy; I own your genius, and from you receive The rules of pleasing, which to you I give.
Página 31 - Not fond of life, but yet content to be : Here mark the fleeting hours ; regret the paft ; And ferioufly prepare, to meet the laft.
Página 103 - O'er the costly cups Of riot-stirring wine, unwholesome draught, Let Pride's loose sons prolong the wasteful night ; My sober evening let the Tankard bless, With toast embrown'd, and fragrant nutmeg fraught, While the rich draught with oft-repeated whiffs Tobacco mild improves. Divine...
Página 64 - For great men want not, what to give, but how. The race of men that follow courts, 'tis true, Think all they get, and more than all, their due ; Still...
Página 103 - Each thought subsides, and sweet oblivion wraps My peaceful brain, as if the leaden rod Of magic Morpheus o'er mine eyes had shed Its opiate influence.
Página 395 - To draw the Eye, or to allure the Heart, Poor were the Praife in Fortune to excel, Yet want the Way to ufe that Fortune well.
Página 82 - King having folemnly engaged in the terms required, DOWNING proceeded, and told, that his mafter the Ufurper, being now at peace with the Dutch, and the States fo...
Página 136 - He is defpifed and rejected of men ; a Man of forrows, and acquainted with grief: and we hid as it were our faces from Him ; He was defpifed, and we efteemed Him not.