The Essays of Michael de Montaigne, Zväzok 3W. Miller, 1811 |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 5 z 65.
Strana 4
... look into my soul will not find me guilty of any man's ruin or affliction , nor of revenge or envy , nor of the public violation of the laws , nor of innovation , nor disturbance , nor of the breach of a promise : and though the ...
... look into my soul will not find me guilty of any man's ruin or affliction , nor of revenge or envy , nor of the public violation of the laws , nor of innovation , nor disturbance , nor of the breach of a promise : and though the ...
Strana 7
... look upon it as a drollery to see me in print . The farther off I am read from my own home the more I am esteemed . I am fain to pur- chase printers in Guienne , elsewhere they purchase · * Plutarch , in the Banquet of the wise Men , ch ...
... look upon it as a drollery to see me in print . The farther off I am read from my own home the more I am esteemed . I am fain to pur- chase printers in Guienne , elsewhere they purchase · * Plutarch , in the Banquet of the wise Men , ch ...
Strana 10
... looks , and do themselves inure The government of mankind to indure . But if again a little blood they taste , Their ... Look back a little on our own experience . There is no man , if he be attentive , who does not find in himself a ...
... looks , and do themselves inure The government of mankind to indure . But if again a little blood they taste , Their ... Look back a little on our own experience . There is no man , if he be attentive , who does not find in himself a ...
Strana 12
... looks upon robbery as a dishonest action , and he hates it , but not so much as poverty . He barely repents of it , but forasmuch as it was in this manner counter- balanced and compensated , he repents not of it . This is not that habit ...
... looks upon robbery as a dishonest action , and he hates it , but not so much as poverty . He barely repents of it , but forasmuch as it was in this manner counter- balanced and compensated , he repents not of it . This is not that habit ...
Strana 33
... look into them . I will read by and by , I say to myself , or to - morrow when I am in the humour . Mean while the time runs away without any incon- venience to me ; for it is impossible to say how tranquil and easy I am in this ...
... look into them . I will read by and by , I say to myself , or to - morrow when I am in the humour . Mean while the time runs away without any incon- venience to me ; for it is impossible to say how tranquil and easy I am in this ...
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Časté výrazy a frázy
according actions Æneid affairs Alcibiades amongst Antisthenes appetite Aristotle beauty better body Boetia Carneades Catullus cause cern chap Cicero common conscience contrary countenance custom Dæmon death desire Diog Diogenes Laertius discourse disease Epicurus epig epist excuse fancy Favorinus favour fear folly fool fortune Galba give hand honour humour imagination judge judgment king Laert laws learned less liberty live manner marriage means ment mind Montaigne nature necessity Neorites never obliged offices old age opinion ourselves Ovid pain passion person Plato pleased pleasure Plutarch Pompey present prince quæ Quæst reason repentance sect Seneca sick Socrates soever sort soul speak suffer Tacitus taigne's thee thing thou thought tion trouble true truth understanding vice vigour Virg virtue wherein whilst Whoever wife wise women words worse Xenophon
Populárne pasáže
Strana 35 - I pass away most of the Days of my Life, and most of the Hours of the Day.
Strana 300 - Felix qui potuit rerum cognoscere causas, Atque metus omnes, et inexorabile fatum Subjecit pedibus, strepitumque Acherontis avari.
Strana 256 - But such a companion should be chosen and acquired from your first setting out. There can be no pleasure to me without communication: there is not so much as a sprightly thought comes into my mind, that it does not grieve me to have produced alone, and that I have no one to communicate it to.
Strana 132 - Frigidus in Venerem senior, frustraque laborem Ingratum trahit ; et, si quando ad proelia ventum est, Ut quondam in stipulis magnus sine viribus ignis, Incassum furit.
Strana 320 - Nor is the profit small, the peasant makes, Who smooths with harrows, or who pounds with rakes, The crumbling clods: nor Ceres, from on high, Regards his...
Strana 125 - quando artibus' inquit 'honestis nullus in urbe locus, nulla emolumenta laborum, res hodie minor est here quam fuit atque eadem eras deteret exiguis aliquid, proponimus illuc ire, fatigatas ubi Daedalus exuit alas, 25 dum nova canities, dum prima et recta senectus, dum superest Lachesi quod torqueat et pedibus me porto meis nullo dextram subeunte bacillo...
Strana 239 - Tis the supreme quality of a woman, which a man ought to seek before any other, as the only dowry that must ruin or preserve our houses. Let men say what they will according to the experience I have learned, I require in married women the economical virtue above all other virtues...
Strana 365 - nature," "pleasure," "circle," "substitution." The question is one of words, and is answered in the same way. "A stone is a body." But if you pressed on: "And what is a body?"— "Substance."— "And what is substance?
Strana 268 - ... fortuitous, and introduced for want of heed. Tis the indiligent reader who loses my subject, and not I; there will always be found some words or other in a corner, that is to the purpose, though it lie very close.
Strana 310 - A quick and earnest way of speaking as mine is, is apt to run into hyperbole. There is nothing to which men commonly are more inclined, than to give way to their own opinions.