Extracts from Various Authors, and Fragments of Table-talk: Afternoons at L******** ...E.B. Gardner, 1873 - 150 pages |
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Results 1-5 of 11
Page 6
... convenient , or otherwise . Not only is this the surest foundation of the moral virtues , but without it the exercise of the intellect , on whatever it may be employed , can lead to no satisfactory result.- SIR B. 6 Education .
... convenient , or otherwise . Not only is this the surest foundation of the moral virtues , but without it the exercise of the intellect , on whatever it may be employed , can lead to no satisfactory result.- SIR B. 6 Education .
Page 25
... virtue . Two persons of equal powers , and both in a position to judge and criticize , hamper one an other at a critical moment ; neither trusts himself to the same extent , because neither is implicitly trusted by others , as though he ...
... virtue . Two persons of equal powers , and both in a position to judge and criticize , hamper one an other at a critical moment ; neither trusts himself to the same extent , because neither is implicitly trusted by others , as though he ...
Page 39
... skill and charity , of the noblest faculties of reason , and of the cardinal virtues of the heart . - J . BELL , Letters to Dr. Gregory . A doubtful art , a knowledge still unknown , which IV MEDICINE, AS A PROFESSION 5.
... skill and charity , of the noblest faculties of reason , and of the cardinal virtues of the heart . - J . BELL , Letters to Dr. Gregory . A doubtful art , a knowledge still unknown , which IV MEDICINE, AS A PROFESSION 5.
Page 47
... virtue and humanity , when his Patients vary from a score to a hundred paupers besetting his door , as the season happens to be healthy or otherwise , will often have occasion to blame himself for rashness of practice , as well as ...
... virtue and humanity , when his Patients vary from a score to a hundred paupers besetting his door , as the season happens to be healthy or otherwise , will often have occasion to blame himself for rashness of practice , as well as ...
Page 74
... virtue . — PLUTARCH , Artaxerxes . Men in society judge not by their Own convictions , but by sympathy with others . — HAZLITT , The Plain Speaker . The enunciation of a great truth , and the in- 74 Passing through Life .
... virtue . — PLUTARCH , Artaxerxes . Men in society judge not by their Own convictions , but by sympathy with others . — HAZLITT , The Plain Speaker . The enunciation of a great truth , and the in- 74 Passing through Life .
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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