Choice Specimens of English LiteratureSheldon, 1870 - 477 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 9
Página xi
... pleasure to read but will also inspire you to uncover new (or long-forgotten) pleasures. Along with sharing stories about my friends and my son, Jaya, I also write about Jason, my common-law partner of almost twenty years. I refer to ...
... pleasure to read but will also inspire you to uncover new (or long-forgotten) pleasures. Along with sharing stories about my friends and my son, Jaya, I also write about Jason, my common-law partner of almost twenty years. I refer to ...
Página 3
... pleasure is connected with an increase and pain with an abatement of some or all of the vital functions , and secondly that pleasure accompanies the moderate dis- charge of nervous activity up to a point not exceeding the powers of ...
... pleasure is connected with an increase and pain with an abatement of some or all of the vital functions , and secondly that pleasure accompanies the moderate dis- charge of nervous activity up to a point not exceeding the powers of ...
Página
... Pleasure drives actions, even to the point of a person committing suicide, which is seemingly far from pleasure. When the present moment lacks pleasure severely enough, ending all future similar moments would provide him what he seeks ...
... Pleasure drives actions, even to the point of a person committing suicide, which is seemingly far from pleasure. When the present moment lacks pleasure severely enough, ending all future similar moments would provide him what he seeks ...
Página 31
... pleasure, especially for the greatest pleasure on offer, the dishes would eventually smell of rot. You might be watching the sun set in Greece, but you would be doing it without a job. Epicurus denies there are two competing motives at ...
... pleasure, especially for the greatest pleasure on offer, the dishes would eventually smell of rot. You might be watching the sun set in Greece, but you would be doing it without a job. Epicurus denies there are two competing motives at ...
Página 47
... pleasure from this communication.25 Sexual or aesthetic, and probably more sexual and aesthetic, this sensuality takes pleasure in tension, in its own tension felt not as the lack of an object but as an expansion of a subject. This ...
... pleasure from this communication.25 Sexual or aesthetic, and probably more sexual and aesthetic, this sensuality takes pleasure in tension, in its own tension felt not as the lack of an object but as an expansion of a subject. This ...
Contenido
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Términos y frases comunes
ancholy arms beauty behold blessed blood Bo-bo breast breath Charlemagne Christian clouds Colma cried dark dead dear death deep delight doth dread dream Dryden earth English eternal eyes fair father fear feel fire give glory grace grave hand happy hast hath head hear heard heart heaven helmet of Navarre Henry of Navarre hill holy honor hope human Ivanhoe John Anderson John Gilpin king labor Lady Teaz land light live look Lord lyre Manual Mayenne mighty mind moon Morar nature ne'er never night noble o'er pain passion peace pleasure poets Pope praise prayer pride rest Sejanus sigh Sir Patrick Spens Sir Pet sleep smile song soul sound spirit sweet tears tell thee thine things thou thought tion truth Twas virtue voice weary wild wind younkers