Enlightened England: An Anthology of Eighteenth Century LiteratureW.W. Norton, 1947 - 1248 páginas |
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Página 65
... suppose that being able to discern the good and ill of his species , he has at the same time no concern for either , nor any sense of excellency or baseness in any moral action relating to one or the other . So that except merely with ...
... suppose that being able to discern the good and ill of his species , he has at the same time no concern for either , nor any sense of excellency or baseness in any moral action relating to one or the other . So that except merely with ...
Página 699
... suppose that man is an exception from this general law of nature : and that he has invented another man- ner of life for himself , better than that which God has allotted him , that is more conducive to his health , strength , and ...
... suppose that man is an exception from this general law of nature : and that he has invented another man- ner of life for himself , better than that which God has allotted him , that is more conducive to his health , strength , and ...
Página 1017
... suppose that , in some few cases , there was a mix- ture of dissimulation — that persons pretended to see or feel what they did not , and imitated the cries or convulsive motions of those who were really overpowered by the Spirit of God ...
... suppose that , in some few cases , there was a mix- ture of dissimulation — that persons pretended to see or feel what they did not , and imitated the cries or convulsive motions of those who were really overpowered by the Spirit of God ...
Contenido
The titles of certain selections appear in smaller type These selections | 2 |
Daniel Defoe | 11 |
Isaac Watts | 57 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Enlightened England: An Anthology of Eighteenth Century Literature Wylie Sypher Vista de fragmentos - 1947 |
Términos y frases comunes
admiration Aeneid Ambrose Philips ancient appear beauty better Bettmann Archive Boswell called charms creature critics Dæmons David Hume death delight Ev'n ev'ry excellent fair fancy fear genius give Gothic grace Grongar Hill hand happy head hear heart heaven hill honor hope Horace Walpole Houyhnhnms human imagination imitation James Boswell John Gay Johnson kind kings ladies learning live look Lord mankind manner master mind Muse nature never night nymph o'er object observed Oliver Goldsmith once pain passions person pleasing pleasure poem poet poetry Pope pow'r praise pride reason rise round Samuel Johnson scene Scotland sense sentiment shade Shakespeare song soul spirit sweet taste thee things Thomas Warton thou thought thro tion told truth virtue walk whole wild wind writing wyllowe Yahoos