Extracts from Various Authors, and Fragments of Table-talk: Afternoons at L******** ...E.B. Gardner, 1873 - 150 pages |
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Page 92
... universal peace . And no man can live only for others , unless he could persuade others to live only for him . - JOHNSON , Sermon . Periods of revolution bring out and develope extraordinary characters ; they produce saints and heroes ...
... universal peace . And no man can live only for others , unless he could persuade others to live only for him . - JOHNSON , Sermon . Periods of revolution bring out and develope extraordinary characters ; they produce saints and heroes ...
Page 100
... universal performance of laborious official duties , without any hope of profit , or of praise . - H . W. RUMSEY , Public Health : the right use of Records , & c . The things of this world were given to us by God for the relief of our ...
... universal performance of laborious official duties , without any hope of profit , or of praise . - H . W. RUMSEY , Public Health : the right use of Records , & c . The things of this world were given to us by God for the relief of our ...
Page 117
... universal affections of mankind , and therewith its liabili- ties to be clouded by their passions . - Quarterly Review , vol . lxxvii . The different sects of the ancient Philosophers disputed with each other , with good humor , because ...
... universal affections of mankind , and therewith its liabili- ties to be clouded by their passions . - Quarterly Review , vol . lxxvii . The different sects of the ancient Philosophers disputed with each other , with good humor , because ...
Page 148
... universal desire and wish of mankind . That whoever had one foot in the grave , was sure to hold back the other as strongly as he could . That the oldest had still hopes of living one day longer , and looked on death as the greatest ...
... universal desire and wish of mankind . That whoever had one foot in the grave , was sure to hold back the other as strongly as he could . That the oldest had still hopes of living one day longer , and looked on death as the greatest ...
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ARCHBISHOP WHATELY ARCHDEACON JORTIN BEAUMONT AND FLETCHER believe BISHOP OF DURHAM body Boswell's Brobdingnag BRODIE Caliph Charity Christian Church consider corruption death desire diseases DUKE OF WELLINGTON duties earth evil experience Facula Prudentum fear feel friends give grave habits HALFORD happiness hear heart Hippocrates History honest honor hope Hudibras human intellectual JOHNSON judgement kind knowledge labor Laputa leisure Letter living look Lord man's mankind Medical Profession Medicine ment mind moral nature never observed OCKLEY opinion passions Patient persons Physician PLUTARCH practice PRAYER principle pursuit PUSEY Quarterly Review reason Religio Medici Religion religious rest rience Saturday Review Science Sermons sick society soul SOUTHEY spirit success sure SWIFT thee things thou thoughtless thoughts tion truth vanity virtue WHATELY whole young youth