SelectionsOxford University Press, 1955 - 446 Seiten |
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Seite 101
... pain to be an evil . It may however be questioned , whether these philo- sophers can be very properly numbered among the teachers of patience ; for if pain be not an evil , there seems no instruction requisite how it may be born ; and ...
... pain to be an evil . It may however be questioned , whether these philo- sophers can be very properly numbered among the teachers of patience ; for if pain be not an evil , there seems no instruction requisite how it may be born ; and ...
Seite 102
... pain deserv'd without complaint be borne . And surely , if we are conscious that we have not contri- buted to our own sufferings , if punishment falls upon innocence , or disappointment happens to industry and prudence , patience ...
... pain deserv'd without complaint be borne . And surely , if we are conscious that we have not contri- buted to our own sufferings , if punishment falls upon innocence , or disappointment happens to industry and prudence , patience ...
Seite 187
... pain abstractedly con- sidered ; that pain however inflicted , or wherever felt , communicates some good to the general system of being , and that every animal is some way or other the better for the pain of every other animal . This ...
... pain abstractedly con- sidered ; that pain however inflicted , or wherever felt , communicates some good to the general system of being , and that every animal is some way or other the better for the pain of every other animal . This ...
Inhalt
Religious Progress | 3 |
Harry Hervey | 9 |
The Use of Catalogues 16 66 | 16 |
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Ambrose Philips ancient appeared Ashbourne attention believe Bennet Langton better blank verse Boswell Catiline censure character common considered conversation danger Dear death delight desire diligence Dryden easily elegance endeavour equally evil excellence expect eyes fancy faults favour fear folly Francis Barber frequent genius give Habit happiness Hebrides honour hope human humble servant imagination Johnson kind King knowledge labour language learning less lexicography Lichfield live Madam mankind manner ment metaphysical poets mind misery moral nature neglected never numbers observed once opinion pain Paradise Lost passions perhaps pleased pleasure poet poetry Pope praise present Prince of Abissinia produced publick Rasselas reason religion SAMUEL JOHNSON Scaliger seldom sentiments Shakespeare shew Skie sometimes suffered suppose surely talk Tatler tell terrour thing thought tion truth vanity verse virtue wish words write