Elegant Extracts: Or, Useful and Entertaining Passages in Prose: Selected for the Improvement of Young Persons: Being Similar in Design to Elegant Extracts in PoetryVicesimus Knox J. Johnson, 1808 - 1 Seiten An anthology of prose passages primarily from Greek, Roman, and English authors. |
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Seite 193
... live in dutiful submission to legal authority . Government and society are united . We cannot have one without the ... lives under , as the best security of his life and property . Gilpin . § 162. Duty to our Teachers and Instruc- tors ...
... live in dutiful submission to legal authority . Government and society are united . We cannot have one without the ... lives under , as the best security of his life and property . Gilpin . § 162. Duty to our Teachers and Instruc- tors ...
Seite 370
... live : neither would a merciful God have created him : know hence thou shalt live afterward . As the bird is inclosed in the cage before he seeth it , yet teareth not his flesh against its sides ; so neither labour thou vainly to run ...
... live : neither would a merciful God have created him : know hence thou shalt live afterward . As the bird is inclosed in the cage before he seeth it , yet teareth not his flesh against its sides ; so neither labour thou vainly to run ...
Seite 1036
... live quietly in the world , I hear , and see , and say nothing . Meddie not between two brothers . The dead and the al sent have no friends left them . Who is the true gentleman , or nobleman ? He whose actions makes him so . Do well to ...
... live quietly in the world , I hear , and see , and say nothing . Meddie not between two brothers . The dead and the al sent have no friends left them . Who is the true gentleman , or nobleman ? He whose actions makes him so . Do well to ...
Inhalt
Sect | 1 |
Advantages of a good Education | 8 |
On the Immortality of the Soul | 14 |
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admire Æneid affections agreeable ancient appear Aristotle attention bad company beauty body cerning character Christ Christian Cicero consider dæmons death Demosthenes divine duty earth elegance endeavour evil excellent expression father favour genius give grace greatest Greece Greek happiness hath heart heaven Herodotus holy Homer honour human Ibid idolatry Iliad imagination Jews kind knowledge labour language learned ligion live Livy Lord mankind manner matter means ment mind moral nation nature neral ness never object observe ourselves Pacuvius passions perfect persons Pindar Plato pleasure poetry poets praise proper racter reason religion render Roman Sallust Scripture sense sentiments shew sion Socrates soul speak spirit style sublime Tacitus taste temper thee Theocritus thine things thou thought Thucydides tion true truth ture unto vice Virgil virtue whole wisdom wise words writing youth