The Works of Samuel Johnson, L. L. D.: In Twelve Volumes, Volumen8William Durell, 1811 |
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Página 22
... pleasure in subverting the reputation of Milton , which I had myself once endeavoured to exalt ; * and of which the foundation had * Virorum maximus - JoANNES MILTONUS - Poeta cele- berrimus - non Angliæ modo , soli natalis , verum ...
... pleasure in subverting the reputation of Milton , which I had myself once endeavoured to exalt ; * and of which the foundation had * Virorum maximus - JoANNES MILTONUS - Poeta cele- berrimus - non Angliæ modo , soli natalis , verum ...
Página 28
... pleasure , and inconveniency with advantage , which we must observe in every thing round us , we have reason to conclude , that to endue created beings with perfec- tion , that is , to produce Good exclusive of Evil , is one of those ...
... pleasure , and inconveniency with advantage , which we must observe in every thing round us , we have reason to conclude , that to endue created beings with perfec- tion , that is , to produce Good exclusive of Evil , is one of those ...
Página 29
... pleasure in the thousandth repeti- tion . " Whatever we enjoy is purely a free gift from our Creator ; but that we enjoy no more , can never sure be deemed an injury , or a just reason to question his infinite benevolence . All our ...
... pleasure in the thousandth repeti- tion . " Whatever we enjoy is purely a free gift from our Creator ; but that we enjoy no more , can never sure be deemed an injury , or a just reason to question his infinite benevolence . All our ...
Página 30
... pleasure or pain from the comparison . Pope might ask the weed , why it was less than the oak , but the weed would never ask the question for itself . The bass and treble differ only to the hearer , meanness and magnificence only to the ...
... pleasure or pain from the comparison . Pope might ask the weed , why it was less than the oak , but the weed would never ask the question for itself . The bass and treble differ only to the hearer , meanness and magnificence only to the ...
Página 34
... pleasures that arise from them , are com- monly recompensed by a more useful kind of common sense , together with a ... pleasure in being mad , which none but madmen know . Ignorance , or the want of know- ledge and literature , the ...
... pleasures that arise from them , are com- monly recompensed by a more useful kind of common sense , together with a ... pleasure in being mad , which none but madmen know . Ignorance , or the want of know- ledge and literature , the ...
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Americans ancient appearance authority Bamff Boethius Boswell charter chief CITATION claim clan colonies considered danger delight desire dignity disavowal discontent distance dominion Dunvegan easily election elegance endeavoured enemies England English equal Erse Essay evil expected expelled expulsion faction Falkland's Island favour force Fort Augustus greater ground happiness Hebrides Highlands honour hope house of commons human imperfection Inch Kenneth infinite inhabitants inquire Interpolation Inverness king king of Spain labour laird land late less liberty Maclean Macleod means ment Middlesex misery nation nature necessary never once opinion pain parliament patriot perhaps pleasure political Port Egmont possession poverty produce punishment Raasay reason religion rich rock Scotland second sight sedition seems sent Slanes Castle sometimes Spain Spaniards Spanish stone subordination suffered suppose tacksman thing thought tion told violence virtue vote whole