The Moral Instructor and Guide to Virtue and Happinessauthor, 1819 - 228 páginas |
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Página 35
... injury than benefit , to the users of it ; Would not one half of the amount levied by di- rect tax , be likely to produce a revolution in the govern- ment ? " In estimating the cost , no account is made of the loss of time inseparable ...
... injury than benefit , to the users of it ; Would not one half of the amount levied by di- rect tax , be likely to produce a revolution in the govern- ment ? " In estimating the cost , no account is made of the loss of time inseparable ...
Página 55
... injury , no ill treatment could ever alter . Seneca tells us , that he had desired his friends to apprize him whenever they saw him ready to fall into a passion , and that he had given them that privilege over him , which he took ...
... injury , no ill treatment could ever alter . Seneca tells us , that he had desired his friends to apprize him whenever they saw him ready to fall into a passion , and that he had given them that privilege over him , which he took ...
Página 75
... injuries they call benefits , and expect a man should thank thein for doing him a mischief ; they cover their most notorious iniquities with a pretext of justice . He that robs upon the highway , had rather find his booty than force it ...
... injuries they call benefits , and expect a man should thank thein for doing him a mischief ; they cover their most notorious iniquities with a pretext of justice . He that robs upon the highway , had rather find his booty than force it ...
Página 104
... injuries , and we are not able to bear them ; " as if any man that can bear anger could not bear an injury , which is much more supportable . Nor is it for the dignity of virtue to be either angry or sad . It is with a tainted mind as ...
... injuries , and we are not able to bear them ; " as if any man that can bear anger could not bear an injury , which is much more supportable . Nor is it for the dignity of virtue to be either angry or sad . It is with a tainted mind as ...
Página 108
... injury , and there is a contumely . The former in its own nature is the heavier : the other slight in itself , and only troublesome to a wounded imagination . And yet some there are that will bear blows , and death itself , rath- er ...
... injury , and there is a contumely . The former in its own nature is the heavier : the other slight in itself , and only troublesome to a wounded imagination . And yet some there are that will bear blows , and death itself , rath- er ...
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The Moral Instructor, and Guide to Virtue and Happiness: Being a Compendium ... Jesse Torrey Visualização integral - 1819 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
actions Alcibiades amongst anger ardent spirits Athenians Athens benefit body cause cial common conduct Confucius conscience consequences constitution crimes death Demetrius diseases distilled spirits domestic dram drink duty effects effeminacy Euthydemus evil exercise faculties father fear Fecula fortune friends give habits heart honor ignorance injury innocent instruction intemperance Jupiter justice kind knowledge labor law of nature Lebanon liberty live luxury mankind manner means mind misery moral nation necessary neighbor never obligation ourselves pain parents passions peace perfect persons philosophy pleasure political portunities possession poverty precepts present preservation principles printing press produce prudence punishment reason render respect riches ridiculous rule Samuel Adams says schools Seneca sense social society Socrates Sotion soul spirituous liquors suffer temperance Themistocles thing tion truth turbed ture vice violence virtue whole wisdom wise word youth
Passagens conhecidas
Página 198 - The earth must be laboured before it gives its increase, and when it is forced into its several products, how many hands must they pass through before they are fit for use ! Manufactures, trade, and agriculture, naturally employ more than nineteen parts of the species in twenty...
Página 200 - Blistering, cupping, bleeding are seldom of use but to the idle and intemperate ; as all those inward applications which are so much in practice among us, are for the most part nothing else but expedients to make luxury consistent with health. The apothecary is perpetually employed in countermining the cook and the vintner.
Página 170 - ... the method of coming at the will of God, concerning any action by the light of nature, is to inquire into the tendency of that action to promote or diminish the general happiness.
Página 164 - ... such as lead a monastic life. Of the same nature with the indulgence of our domestic affections, and equally refreshing to the spirits, is the pleasure which results from acts of bounty and beneficence, exercised either in giving "money or in imparting to those •who want it (he assistance of our skill and profession. Another main article of human happiness is, II. The exercise of our faculties, either of body or mind, in the pursuit of some engaging end.
Página 201 - For my part, when I behold a fashionable table set out in all its magnificence, I fancy that I see gouts and dropsies, fevers and lethargies, with other innumerable distempers, lying in ambuscade among the dishes.
Página 164 - All that can be said is, that there remains a presumption in favour of those conditions of life, in which men generally appear most cheerful and contented. For though the apparent happiness of mankind be not always a true measure of their real happiness, it is the best measure we have.
Página 178 - Whence a person who is provided with neither (and neither can be acquired without exercise and instruction) will be useless; and he that is useless, will generally be at the same time mischievous to the community. So that to send an uneducated child into the world, is injurious to the rest of mankind ; it is little better than to turn out a mad dog or a wild beast into the streets.
Página 166 - When we are in perfect health and spirits, we feel in ourselves a happiness independent of any particular outward gratification whatever, and of which we can give no account. This is an enjoyment which the Deity has annexed to life ; and it probably constitutes, in a great measure, the happiness of infants and brutes, especially of the lower and sedentary- orders of animals, as of oysters, periwinkles, and the like ; for which I have sometimes been at a loss to find out amusement.
Página 199 - ... ball of wood, and filled it with several drugs; after which he closed it up so artificially that nothing appeared. He likewise took a mall, and after having hollowed the handle, and that part which strikes the ball, he inclosed in them several drugs after the game manner as in the ball itself.