Essays Upon Several Moral Subjects ...D. Brown, 1705 |
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Side 6
... first may not think it fo decent to com- plain . And yet feveral of Homer's He- roes make a lamentable Business of a Flesh Wound : But without doubt a great deal of the Anguish may be fenc'd off off by the force of the Mind , by a 6 A ...
... first may not think it fo decent to com- plain . And yet feveral of Homer's He- roes make a lamentable Business of a Flesh Wound : But without doubt a great deal of the Anguish may be fenc'd off off by the force of the Mind , by a 6 A ...
Side 23
... First Caufe . For to speak plainly , Matter and Mo- tion are but bare Lookers on , the Senti- ments both of Pain , and Satisfaction , be- ing immediately bestow'd by God him- felf . 2dly , If it be demanded whether a Thought can rack a ...
... First Caufe . For to speak plainly , Matter and Mo- tion are but bare Lookers on , the Senti- ments both of Pain , and Satisfaction , be- ing immediately bestow'd by God him- felf . 2dly , If it be demanded whether a Thought can rack a ...
Side 26
... first feldom feels half with the other . The Caufe is a powerful Leni- tive ; and rebates the Edge of the Cala- mity . But remorfe of Confcience , and difmal Profpects , load the Execution , and are terrible Additions to Pain . 3 ...
... first feldom feels half with the other . The Caufe is a powerful Leni- tive ; and rebates the Edge of the Cala- mity . But remorfe of Confcience , and difmal Profpects , load the Execution , and are terrible Additions to Pain . 3 ...
Side 28
... to dance after them . Philal . It may be fo , but why fo much plain Dealing at the first Salute ? I should be glad to take you in jest , but that I perceive perceive your Tongue and your Face go together ; Philotimus 28 A MORAL ESSAY A ...
... to dance after them . Philal . It may be fo , but why fo much plain Dealing at the first Salute ? I should be glad to take you in jest , but that I perceive perceive your Tongue and your Face go together ; Philotimus 28 A MORAL ESSAY A ...
Side 30
... first at present , if you please . Philot . I perceive you are inclin'd to argue against private Revenge : I am con- tented to hear you ; but am too much out of Temper to difpute , and therefore you must not expect I fhould go any ...
... first at present , if you please . Philot . I perceive you are inclin'd to argue against private Revenge : I am con- tented to hear you ; but am too much out of Temper to difpute , and therefore you must not expect I fhould go any ...
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againſt almoſt Alph anſwer Apoſtles becauſe Befides beſt Buſineſs cafe Cauſes Chriſtianity Circumſtances Confcience confiderable Conftitution Council courſe Crit Crito Cuſtom defire Diſeaſe Diſorder Diſtinction Encrat Enlab Erot Eſtate Eufeb Eulab faid fame Fancy farther feems felf felves fenfible ferve fhall fhew fhort fhould fide fince firft firſt fome fometimes fomewhat ftand fuch fuffer fufficient fuppofe fure give govern'd himſelf Honour Houſe Humour Inftance Intereft Jews Juftice lefs Libertine Liberty Limbs lofe Meaſures Mifoch Mind Miſchief miſtake Money moſt muft muſt Nature Notwithſtanding obferve oblig'd occafion Oenoph on't Paffions Pain Perfon Philal Philarch Philot pleaſe Pleaſure Pray prefent publick Puniſhment purpoſe Queſtion racter Reaſon Religion ſay Sence ſhall ſome Sophron ſtand ſtrangely Temper tence thefe themſelves ther there's theſe thing thofe thoſe Thought tion Tis true twas Ufurer Ufury Underſtanding unleſs uſe Vertue worfe World
Populære avsnitt
Side 200 - His lord answered and said unto him, Thou wicked and slothful servant, thou knewest that I reap where I sowed not, and gather where I have not strawed. Thou oughtest therefore to have put my money to the exchangers, and then at my coming, I should have received mine own with usury.
Side 255 - But I say, Have they not heard? Yes verily, their sound went into all the earth, and their words unto the ends of the world.
Side 192 - Woe is me, my mother, that thou hast borne me a man of strife and a man of contention to the whole earth ! I have neither lent on usury, nor men have lent to me on usury; yet every one of them doth curse me.
Side 234 - ... serviceableness of business, and the use it has in the world, which makes an employment honourable. And can any thing compare with the Apostles in this particular? Were they not to form and instruct the Church, and to govern the most noble society upon earth ? Were they not to publish the Mysteries of Redemption, the offers of the New Covenant, and the glories of the other world ? . . . . Fire in the figure of tongues sat upon the heads of each of them. This was an emblem of the gift of languages,...
Side 15 - If it be so, our God whom we serve is able to deliver us from the burning fiery furnace, and he will deliver us out of thine hand, 0 king. But if not, be it known unto thee, 0 king, that we will not serve thy gods, nor worship the golden image which thou hast set up.
Side 37 - Intereftbut its own, and is a perfect Stranger to Humanity. Revenge when improv'd into Habit and Inclination, is the Temper of a Tyrant : 'Tis a ftrong Competition of Pride and Cruelty : Impatient .of the leaft Provocation, and unconcern'd at the Mifchief of a return. Now he that's fenfible of no Evil, but what he feels, has a hard Heart:, and he that can fpare no Kindnefs from himfelf, has a narrow Soul. A Temper that's generous and humane, is willing to overlook, to excufe, and wait for better...
Side 264 - ... Kindnefs of their Acquaintance. Solitude is a great Relief in fuch Circumftances : They are glad to get clear of the Crowd for Air and Breathing, and to have their Motion a little better at liberty. To withdraw upon the Score of Religion, is a Reafon ftill higher than the reft. To...
Side 135 - For yee are bought with a price : therefore glorifie God in your body, and in your spirit, which are Gods.
Side 130 - Whore, nor the Price of a Dog, into the Houfe of the Lord thy God, for any Vow : For even both thefe are an Abomination unto the Lord thy God. And in the bev.
Side 243 - ... bright as the flame. .... This was a glorious attestation, this must needs make their commission undisputed, and their character indelible. Should a ^Prince be proclaimed from the sky, anointed out of the Ampoul, and crowned by an Angel, his authority could not be more visible. ... I can't help saying, that, in my opinion, a Prince made but a lean figure in comparison with an Apostle. What is the magnificence of palaces, the richness of furniture, the quality of attendance, what is all this to...