| 1890 - 986 Seiten
...enjoyment entirely moral, and by no means sensual, as we might be induced to suppose. The hashish-cater is happy, not like the gourmand or the famished man...when satisfying his appetite, or the voluptuary in the gratification of his desires, but like him who hears tidings which fill him with joy, like the... | |
| William Benjamin Carpenter - 1894 - 824 Seiten
...sensations, in spite of the diversity in the canses to which they are dne ; for the Hachisch pater is happy, not like the gourmand or the famished man...appetite, or the voluptuary in gratifying his amative lesires, but like him who hears tidings which fill him with joy, like the miser counting his treasures,... | |
| Arthur Sinclair - 1895 - 248 Seiten
...enjoyment entirely moral and by no means sensual, as we might be inclined to suppose. The hashish eater is happy, not like the gourmand or the famished man when satisfying his appetite, nor the voluptuary the gratification of his desires, but like him who hears tidings which fill him... | |
| 1897 - 844 Seiten
...term applied in the Levant to the excitement produced by this agent) as mental rather than sensual. ' The hashish-eater is happy, not like the gourmand...the famished man when satisfying his appetite, or tlie voluptuary in the gratification of his desires, but like him who hears tidings which till him... | |
| Harry Thurston Peck - 1898 - 988 Seiten
...this I imply an enjoyment entirely moral, and by no means sensual, as we might be induced to suppose. The hashish-eater is happy, not like the gourmand...when satisfying his appetite, or the voluptuary in the gratification of his desires, but like him who hears tidings which fill him with joy, like the... | |
| William Makepeace Thackeray - 1879 - 820 Seiten
...of sensations, in spite of the diversity in the causes to which they are due; for the hachisch-eater is happy, not like the gourmand or the famished man...amative desires, but like him who hears tidings which nil him with joy, like the miser counting his treasures, the gambler who ia successful at play, or... | |
| Mordecai Cooke, Mordecai Cubitt Cooke - 1997 - 308 Seiten
...is perfectly inaccessible to sorrow or pain. "The haschisch eater is happy," continues Dr. Moreau, "not like the gourmand, or the famished man when satisfying his appetite, or the voluptuary in the gratification of his amative desires; but like him who hears tidings which fill him with joy, or... | |
| Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge - 1862 - 608 Seiten
...an enjoyment entirely moral, and by no means sensual, as might be supposed. For the haschish-eater is happy, not like the gourmand, or the famished man...when satisfying his appetite, or the voluptuary in the gratification of his amative desires, — but like him who hears tidings which fill him with joy,... | |
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