Exempla moralia: or, Third book of new English examples, to be rendered into Latin1789 |
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Pagina 3
... fame Number and Perfon with the Nominative Cafe as , 1. Virtue excelleth all Things in itself , all good Things are at Hand , with whom is Virtue . 2. Good Men hate to Sin , from a Love of Virtue . 3. Wicked Men fancy that they can ...
... fame Number and Perfon with the Nominative Cafe as , 1. Virtue excelleth all Things in itself , all good Things are at Hand , with whom is Virtue . 2. Good Men hate to Sin , from a Love of Virtue . 3. Wicked Men fancy that they can ...
Pagina 9
... Fame ; which Sort of Men are com- monly much talk'd of , but inwardly little reverenced . 3. Beware even of falfe Accufations , for the common People , being ignorant of the Truth , judge by Opinion and Report . * 4. How happy am I ...
... Fame ; which Sort of Men are com- monly much talk'd of , but inwardly little reverenced . 3. Beware even of falfe Accufations , for the common People , being ignorant of the Truth , judge by Opinion and Report . * 4. How happy am I ...
Pagina 12
... fame pleafing Road . 2. So do all Things , as under the Eye of fome . good Man , always prefent ; and , when you have made fo great a Progrefs , as even to reverence yourself you may difmifs your Tutor . 3. There is a certain Joy which ...
... fame pleafing Road . 2. So do all Things , as under the Eye of fome . good Man , always prefent ; and , when you have made fo great a Progrefs , as even to reverence yourself you may difmifs your Tutor . 3. There is a certain Joy which ...
Pagina 13
... fame Ship , it is impoffible that the fame Wind which favours the one , fhould crofs the other . 3. As for Charity , it is never to be expected from a covetous Man , who dreads to leffen his own Heaps , more than to ftarve his poor ...
... fame Ship , it is impoffible that the fame Wind which favours the one , fhould crofs the other . 3. As for Charity , it is never to be expected from a covetous Man , who dreads to leffen his own Heaps , more than to ftarve his poor ...
Pagina 18
... fame Gender ; the Relatives may agree in Gender , with the latter of the Subftantives ; as , 1. How full of Reafon and Counfel is that Animal , whom we call Man ! 2. Ovid was born in the . Town , which is called Sulmo .. Or with the ...
... fame Gender ; the Relatives may agree in Gender , with the latter of the Subftantives ; as , 1. How full of Reafon and Counfel is that Animal , whom we call Man ! 2. Ovid was born in the . Town , which is called Sulmo .. Or with the ...
Alte ediții - Afișează-le pe toate
Exempla moralia: or, Third book of new English examples, to be rendered into ... English examples Vizualizare completă - 1818 |
Exempla Moralia: Or, Third Book of New English Examples, to Be Rendered Into ... English Examples Nu există previzualizare disponibilă - 2016 |
Exempla Moralia: Or, Third Book of New English Examples, to Be Rendered Into ... English Examples Nu există previzualizare disponibilă - 2016 |
Termeni și expresii frecvente
Ablative Cafe Accufative Cafe additur Adjectives againſt alfo becauſe beft beſt Bufinefs Buſineſs Caufe Command Conftruction Counfel Danger Dative Cafe deferve Defire Difpofition Duty eafy Evil excellent fafe faid fame fatisfy Favour Fear feem felf felves ferve fhall fhew fhould fignifying firft fome fometimes foon Fortune Friend Friendship fuch fuffer fufficient fure Genitive Cafe Gerund Glory govern a Dative greateſt happy hath himſelf honeft Honour Infinitive Mood Inftructions Intereft itſelf juft Juftice Kindneſs Labour Latin lative leaft lefs live Love Mafter malè Mind moft moſt muft muſt myfelf Nature neceffary nefs Nominative Cafe Noun Number ourſelves Paffion Paffive pafs Participle Perfon Philofophy pleaſe Pleaſure Praife Praiſe prefent Prepofition Profperity promife Prudence Reafon Refpect ſpeak Subftantive Subjunctive Mood thefe themſelves theſe thofe Things thoſe truft unleſs uſe Verba Verbs Virtue whofe wife Wiſdom Words worfe yourſelf
Pasaje populare
Pagina 16 - These last worked only one hour, and you have made them equal to us who have borne the burden of the day and the scorching heat.
Pagina 201 - An inordinate passion for glory, as I have already observed, is likewise to be guarded against ; for it deprives us of liberty, the only prize for which men of elevated sentiments ought to contend. Power is so far from being desirable in itself, that it sometimes ought to...
Pagina 47 - We are in the world like men playing at tables, the chance is not in our power, but to play it is; and when it is fallen we must manage it as we can ; and let nothing trouble us, but when we do a base action, or speak like a fool, or think wickedly : these things God hath put into our powers; but concerning those things which are wholly in the choice of another, they cannot fall under our deliberation...
Pagina 122 - Happy" — fays the great teacher of Ifrael — " Happy is the man that findeth " Wifdom, and the man that getteth un" derftanding. For the merchandife of it " is better than the merchandife of filver, " and the gain thereof than fine gold. She " is more precious than rubies, and all the " things thou canft defire are not to be
Pagina 26 - Honour, and the like. For it is fure they add nothing of true Worth to the Man: Somewhat of outward Pomp and Bravery they may help him to, but that makes no Change in the Perfon. You may load an Afs with Money, or deck him with rich Trappings, yet ftill you will not make him a whit the nobler kind of Beaft by either of them.
Pagina 133 - Anger may be suppressed. IT is an idle thing to pretend that we cannot govern our anger ; for some things that we do are much harder than others that we ought to do ; the wildest affections may be tamed by discipline, and there is hardly any thing which the mind will do but it may do.
Pagina 26 - ... if thou shalt return to the dogmata and to the honouring of reason, will esteem of thee no better than of a mere brute, and of an ape. XIV. Not as though thou hadst thousands of years to live. Death hangs over thee : whilst yet thou livest, whilst thou mayest, be good. XV. Now much time and leisure doth he gain, who is not curious to know what his neighbour hath said, or hath done, or hath attempted, but only what he doth himself, that it may be just and holy ? or to express it in Agathos...
Pagina 97 - In taking revenge a man is but equal with his enemy, but in passing it over he is his superior.