The World's Best Essays, from the Earliest Period to the Present Time, Volumen5David Josiah Brewer, Edward Archibald Allen, William Schuyler F.P. Kaiser, 1900 - 4190 páginas |
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Página 1707
... force the eternal barrier of truth and justice . The inward master , called reason , intimately checks the attempt with absolute power , and knows how to set bounds to the most impudent folly of men . Though Vice has for many ages ...
... force the eternal barrier of truth and justice . The inward master , called reason , intimately checks the attempt with absolute power , and knows how to set bounds to the most impudent folly of men . Though Vice has for many ages ...
Página 1715
... force which fashions my own body in darkness and in secret . Yonder it waves free , and leaps and dances as self - forming mo- tion in the brute ; and , in every new body , represents itself as another separate , self - subsisting world ...
... force which fashions my own body in darkness and in secret . Yonder it waves free , and leaps and dances as self - forming mo- tion in the brute ; and , in every new body , represents itself as another separate , self - subsisting world ...
Página 1720
... force which has caused injury by acting without rule can- not be intended to do so more in that way ; it cannot be destined to renew itself ; it must be used up , from this time forth and forever , by that one outbreak . All those ...
... force which has caused injury by acting without rule can- not be intended to do so more in that way ; it cannot be destined to renew itself ; it must be used up , from this time forth and forever , by that one outbreak . All those ...
Página 1722
... force , and with one step , shall raise itself up to a degree of culture which we want power to conceive . When selfish aims no longer divide mankind , and their powers can no longer be exercised in destroying one another in battle ...
... force , and with one step , shall raise itself up to a degree of culture which we want power to conceive . When selfish aims no longer divide mankind , and their powers can no longer be exercised in destroying one another in battle ...
Página 1726
... force of their wit and humor , to expose and ex- tirpate those follies and vices which chiefly prevailed in their several countries . I would not be thought to confine wit and humor to these writers . Shakespeare , Moliere , and some ...
... force of their wit and humor , to expose and ex- tirpate those follies and vices which chiefly prevailed in their several countries . I would not be thought to confine wit and humor to these writers . Shakespeare , Moliere , and some ...
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Términos y frases comunes
admiration Antisthenes appears Attic Nights beauty become better born called cause century character Chrysippus civilization Complete Cotton Mather death desire Diogenes Divine dress earth enemy England English Epictetus Epicurus essays evil existence expression eyes father feeling fool friends genius give Goethe greatest Greek happiness hath heart heaven honor human idea infinite kind king labor Lacedæmonia lady Laocoon laws learned less live Lord Byron Margaret Roper marriage matter means mind moral nations Natural Law nature never ourselves passion perhaps person philosophy Plato pleasure Plutarch poet poetry political Poor Richard says principle reason ruin seems Socrates soul speak spirit sure Tacitus things THOMAS DUDLEY THOMAS FULLER thou thought Thucydides tion true truth universe virtue whole Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship wise words writing