The Tale of a Tub and Other WorksG. Routledge, 1889 - 448 pàgines |
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Resultats 1 - 5 de 23.
Pàgina 53
... wonder , helps to make up the crowd half so much as yourself ? Don't you consider that you take up more room with that carcass than any five here ? Is not the place as free for us as for you ? Bring your own guts to a reasonable compass ...
... wonder , helps to make up the crowd half so much as yourself ? Don't you consider that you take up more room with that carcass than any five here ? Is not the place as free for us as for you ? Bring your own guts to a reasonable compass ...
Pàgina 86
... wonder how it possibly came to be overlooked by those who deny the antiquity of the true critics . For pretending to make a description of many strange animals about India , he has set down these remarkable 1 " Near Helicon and round ...
... wonder how it possibly came to be overlooked by those who deny the antiquity of the true critics . For pretending to make a description of many strange animals about India , he has set down these remarkable 1 " Near Helicon and round ...
Pàgina 98
... wonder of that ? By G—— , I saw a large house of lime and stone travel over sea and land ( granting that it stopped sometimes to bait ) above two thousand German leagues . " And that which was the good of it , he would swear desperately ...
... wonder of that ? By G—— , I saw a large house of lime and stone travel over sea and land ( granting that it stopped sometimes to bait ) above two thousand German leagues . " And that which was the good of it , he would swear desperately ...
Pàgina 151
... wonder at the greatest consequences , from so many loppings and mutilations to which the ears of our fathers and our own have been of late so much exposed ? It is true , indeed , that while this island of ours was under the dominion of ...
... wonder at the greatest consequences , from so many loppings and mutilations to which the ears of our fathers and our own have been of late so much exposed ? It is true , indeed , that while this island of ours was under the dominion of ...
Pàgina 179
... wonder how the ancients could pretend to insist upon their antiquity , when it was so plain ( if they went to that ) that the moderns were much the more ancient of the two . As for any obligations they owed to the ancients , they ...
... wonder how the ancients could pretend to insist upon their antiquity , when it was so plain ( if they went to that ) that the moderns were much the more ancient of the two . As for any obligations they owed to the ancients , they ...
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Passatges populars
Pàgina 402 - But the wisdom that is from above, is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, and easy to be entreated, full of mercy and good fruits, without partiality, and without hypocrisy.
Pàgina 383 - Ye call me Master and Lord: and ye say well; for so I am. If I then, your Lord and Master, have washed your feet; ye also ought to wash one another's feet. For I have given you an example, that ye should do as I have done to you.
Pàgina 380 - Likewise, ye younger, submit yourselves unto the elder. Yea, all of you be subject one to another, and be clothed with humility : for God resisteth the proud, and giveth grace to the humble.
Pàgina 134 - Epicurus modestly hoped that, one time or other, a certain fortuitous concourse of all men's opinions, after perpetual justlings, the sharp with the smooth, the light and the heavy, the round and the square, would by certain clinamina unite in the notions of atoms and void, as these did in the originals of all things. Cartesius reckoned to see, before he died, the sentiments of all philosophers, like so many lesser stars in his romantic system, wrapped and drawn within his own vortex.
Pàgina 126 - ... chaps. For we must here observe, that all learning was esteemed among them, to be compounded from the same principle. Because, first, it is generally affirmed, or confessed, that learning puffeth men up; and, secondly, they proved it by the following syllogism: Words are but wind; and learning is nothing but words; ergo, learning is nothing but wind.
Pàgina 351 - Nay, though the treacherous tapster Thomas, Hangs a new Angel two doors from us, As fine as dauber's hands can make it, In hopes that strangers may mistake it, We think it both a shame and sin To quit the true old Angel Inn. Now this is Stella's case in fact, An angel's face a little crack'd, Could poets or could painters fix How angels look at thirty-six...
Pàgina 272 - And, like a drunkard, gives it up again. Brisk Susan whips her linen from the rope, While the first drizzling...
Pàgina 207 - Mrs Nab, it might become you to be more civil ; If your money be gone, as a learned Divine says,* d'ye see, You are no text for my handling ; so take that from me : I was never taken for a Conjurer before, I'd have you to know.
Pàgina 381 - God hath tempered the body together, having given more abundant honour to that part which lacked: that there should be no schism in the body, but that the members should have the same care one for another. And whether one member suffer, all the members suffer with it; or one member be honoured, all the members rejoice with it.
Pàgina 72 - I must, with the reader's good leave and patience, have recourse to some points of weight, which the authors of that age have not sufficiently illustrated. For about this time it happened a sect arose, whose tenets obtained and spread very far, especially in the grand monde, and among everybody of good fashion. They worshipped a sort of idol, who, as their doctrine delivered, did daily create men by a kind of manufactory operation.