The British Essayists: With Prefaces, Historical and Biographical, 10±ÇLittle, Brown, 1864 |
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11 ÆäÀÌÁö
... virtue in the world . Every man is ready to give in a long catalogue of those virtues and good qualities he expects to find in the person of a friend , but very few of us are careful to cultivate them in ourselves . Love and esteem are ...
... virtue in the world . Every man is ready to give in a long catalogue of those virtues and good qualities he expects to find in the person of a friend , but very few of us are careful to cultivate them in ourselves . Love and esteem are ...
12 ÆäÀÌÁö
... virtue . There is something in friendship so very great and noble , that in those fictitious stories which are invented to the honour of any particular person , the authors have thought it as necessary to make their hero a friend as a ...
... virtue . There is something in friendship so very great and noble , that in those fictitious stories which are invented to the honour of any particular person , the authors have thought it as necessary to make their hero a friend as a ...
19 ÆäÀÌÁö
... virtue or vice . Cheerfulness is , in the first place , the best pro- moter of health . Repinings , and secret murmurs of heart , give imperceptible strokes to those delicate fibres of which the vital parts are composed , and wear out ...
... virtue or vice . Cheerfulness is , in the first place , the best pro- moter of health . Repinings , and secret murmurs of heart , give imperceptible strokes to those delicate fibres of which the vital parts are composed , and wear out ...
28 ÆäÀÌÁö
... virtues . This short fable , which has no pretence in it to reason or argument , and but a very small share of wit , has , however , recommended itself , wholly by its impiety , to those weak men who would distinguish themselves by the ...
... virtues . This short fable , which has no pretence in it to reason or argument , and but a very small share of wit , has , however , recommended itself , wholly by its impiety , to those weak men who would distinguish themselves by the ...
34 ÆäÀÌÁö
... virtue does not consist in con- strained behaviour , and wry faces ; that must be allowed ; but there is a decency in the aspect and manner of ladies , contracted from a habit of virtue , and from general reflections that regard a ...
... virtue does not consist in con- strained behaviour , and wry faces ; that must be allowed ; but there is a decency in the aspect and manner of ladies , contracted from a habit of virtue , and from general reflections that regard a ...
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