Letters of Pope Clement XIV (Ganganelli), to which are Prefixed Anecdotes of His Life: Trans. from the FrenchDutton, 1809 |
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Side ii
... " with him , that he might neither be exposed to « envy nor persecution . Reading excellent books , particularly French , with the conversation of 66 men " men of Genius , and a great intimacy with ii ADVERTISEMENT .
... " with him , that he might neither be exposed to « envy nor persecution . Reading excellent books , particularly French , with the conversation of 66 men " men of Genius , and a great intimacy with ii ADVERTISEMENT .
Side iv
... conversation , lively sallies of hu- " mour , and sometimes amusing raillery , made a great part of his innocent relaxation . His dis- " course comprehended a great deal , but was con- " veyed in few words . He loved arguments , but ...
... conversation , lively sallies of hu- " mour , and sometimes amusing raillery , made a great part of his innocent relaxation . His dis- " course comprehended a great deal , but was con- " veyed in few words . He loved arguments , but ...
Side v
... occular witness during many long and frequent conversations . If I , who never had the happiness of convers- ing with him but three times in my life , have been able able to speak the language of Clement XIV . with ADVERTISEMENT .
... occular witness during many long and frequent conversations . If I , who never had the happiness of convers- ing with him but three times in my life , have been able able to speak the language of Clement XIV . with ADVERTISEMENT .
Side 1
... conversation ; that is to say , like those who never made it their study . However , this . does not prevent me from admiring whatever you give to the public , or my soul from being fired at reading a fine Poem . It is impossible to ...
... conversation ; that is to say , like those who never made it their study . However , this . does not prevent me from admiring whatever you give to the public , or my soul from being fired at reading a fine Poem . It is impossible to ...
Side 43
... conversation . Your letter is just brought to me , by which I am sorry to find that you cannot , at present , look into the treatises in question : I am the more concerned , as your opinion would have had great weight with . me . But I ...
... conversation . Your letter is just brought to me , by which I am sorry to find that you cannot , at present , look into the treatises in question : I am the more concerned , as your opinion would have had great weight with . me . But I ...
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Letters of Pope Clement XIV to Which Are Prefixed Anecdotes of His Life, Volum 4 Pope Clement XIV Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2016 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
admirable affectionate servant Apostles Apostolical Benediction assure attachment Augustine beautiful Benedict XIV bosom capable Cardinal Cardinal Passionei Christian Church Clement XIV Consultor Convent dear Abbé dear Doctor death Deity desire discourse divine eloquence employed endeavour esteem eternity excellent Faith favour Fisherman's Ring Friar friendship Ganganelli genius give gratitude greatest happiness hath heart Heaven Holy Apostles Holy Father Holy Office honour humble ideas imagination Italian ject Jesus Christ knowledge labours learned LETTER LETTER Libraries light live Lord manner merit Metastasio mind Minor Conventuals Morality Naples never notwithstanding objects oblige opinion Order ourselves passions perfectly acquainted persuaded Piety pleasure Poet Poetry Pontificate Predestination present procure proof reason received Religion respect REVEREND FATHER Rimini ROME Sciences sensible sentiments shew sincerely soul Style sublime Tertullian Theology thing thoughts tion Treatise truth Turin virtues wisdom wish worthy write zeal
Populære avsnitt
Side 191 - When the ear heard me, then it blessed me; and when the eye saw me, it gave witness to me: Because I delivered the poor that cried, and the fatherless, and him that had none to help him. The blessing of him that was ready to perish came upon me: and I caused the widow's heart to sing for joy.
Side 33 - ... eye hath not seen, nor the ear heard, nor hath it entered into the heart of man to conceive ; but which Thou hast prepared for them who love Thee.
Side 25 - Yet, perhaps, man is not so malignant as is imagined : idleness leads him into mere excesses than perversity. Opportunities of doing mischief rise in crowds round the man who is unemployed; I pretend not to paint man such as he is, but I have said enough to give a just idea of him, and oblige him to own, that when he unites himself to God, he is a whole, but when separated from him, nothing. Reason, without religion, like those luminous exhalations which rise in the bosom of night, enlighten only...
Side 32 - ... am not surprized, that to the Christian philosophers, death was a continual subject of meditation. When rightly viewed, it offers to mankind nothing but what is great, nothing but what is. cheering. But we judge of it only by the sepulchral horrors ; that is, by what has a relation solely to our body, and then it appears to us the most frightful...
Side 107 - ... even in the middle of the night ; endowed with a fertility which makes her bud and bring forth fruit for time and for eternity : watered with a miraculous dew, by which^ like nature, she is at once embellished and refreshed' : she has her diamonds, her pearls, her metals, her plants, her flowers.
Side 166 - Had I viewed only the glory of this world, I would have said to Death, when he presented to me the cup of bitterness,
Side 19 - The man, conversant with himself, lives almost perpetually in an enemy's country : boiling blood, a wandering imagination, contradictory desires, fiery passions, raise an intestine war, often attended by the most fatal consequences. — He who desires to guide himself by the rules of wisdom. must pass his life in a continual struggle: for in us there are two men, the terrestrial and the spiritual, who are incessantly at war, and agree only when enlightened Reason is the pilot, and an upright heart...
Side 167 - I know not when, or if ever I shall resume it. , ; A moment's ease, after seven days and nights of continual pain, puts the pen again into my hand. One thing comforts me, that by the favour of heaven my mind acquires strength as my body decays, and there is only one thing that gives me real affliction. I have not done all the good I ought to have done, for which reason I earnestly...
Side 31 - Thus must we re-unite the present with the future, the earth with heaven ; in a word, this world with the other, in order to be thoroughly acquainted with man ; for, in fact, he so appertains to the...
Side 22 - Reason when he attributes those astonishing operations to the inert mass of his body, and dares to attribute the honour of them to the acrimony of his bile, or the quick circulation of his blood. None but a spiritual tual being can produce immaterial ideas.