The Light of Nature Pursued, Volumen1,Parte2

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T. Jones, and sold by T. Payne, 1768
 

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Página 85 - Tis not from whom, but where, we live : The place does oft those graces give. Great Julius, on the mountains bred, A flock perhaps, or herd, had led. He that the world subdued ',.had been But the best wrestler on the green.
Página 58 - Neither her out-side form'd so fair, nor aught In procreation common to all kinds (Though higher of the genial Bed by far, And with mysterious reverence I deem) So much delights me, as those graceful acts, Those thousand decencies that daily flow From all her words and actions, mixt with Love...
Página 219 - Life is like a game at cards ; we know the cards will beat any one, but he who plays them carefully will do more with the same cards, than he who throws them out at random. The gifts of nature, education, and fortune, are the cards put into our hands ; all we have to do is to manage them well by a steady adherence to the dictates of sound reason.
Página 160 - Plato was that of a charioteer driving his pair of horses, by which latter he allegorised the concupiscible and irascible passions ; but as we have now-a-days left off driving our own chariots, but keep a coachman to do it for us, I think the mind may be more commodiously compared to a traveller riding a single horse, wherein reason is represented by the rider, and imagination with all its train of opinions, appetites, and habits, by the beast. Everybody sees the horse does all the work; the strength...
Página 161 - Perhaps sometimes he may prove startish or restive, turning out of the way, or running into a pond to drink, maugre all endeavours to prevent him ; but this depends greatly upon the discipline he has been used to. The office of the rider lies in putting his horse into the proper road, and the pace most convenient for the present purpose, guiding and conducting him as he goes along, checking him when too forward or spurring him when too tardy, being attentive to his motions, never...
Página 297 - ... somebody should tell you that such a one was a very selfish person, and for proof of it give a long account of his being once catched on horseback by a shower, that he took shelter under a tree, that he alighted, put on his great coat, and was wholly busied in muffling himself up, without having a single thought all the while of his wife or children, his friends or his country : would not you take it for a banter ? or would you think the person or his behaviour could be called selfish in any...
Página 297 - ... therein, carry any spice of selfishness. But men are led into this mistake by laying too much stress upon etymology, for selfishness being derived from self, they learnedly infer that whatever is done to please one's own inclination must fall under that appellation, not considering that derivatives do not always retain the full latitude of their roots. Wearing woollen cloaths or eating mutton does not make a man sheepish, nor does employing himself now and then in reading render him bookish :...
Página 364 - ... 120 That we might be prepared, through every ill, In peril and in pain, in life, in death ; Though persecution, famine, and the sword, Fronted our way, prepared to hold right on ; Calm to take up our cross, and follow Him Who meekly bowed his head upon that cross ; For if in this life only we had hope, We were of all most miserable. Lord, Thee have I followed, now in age, and poor...
Página 184 - knows a right line is the shortest distance between two points, so as to touch them both, and the nearest approach from any one to any other given point is along such right line. From hence," he adds, " it has been applied by way of metaphor, to rules and actions.
Página 343 - So hand in hand they .pafs'd, the lovelieft pair , That ever fince in love's embraces met; Adam the goodlieft man of men fince born : His fons, the faireft of her daughters Eve.

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