Beauties of History; Or, Pictures of Virtue and ViceMozley, 1808 |
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Results 1-5 of 44
Page 1
... kind- est attendant on his sickness ; a faithful adviser in dis- tress , a comforter in affliction , and a prudent manager of all his domestic affairs . Good - nature and evenness of temper will give you an easy companion for life ...
... kind- est attendant on his sickness ; a faithful adviser in dis- tress , a comforter in affliction , and a prudent manager of all his domestic affairs . Good - nature and evenness of temper will give you an easy companion for life ...
Page 20
... kind : commonly our own children shall pay us home for it . Where shall we find the person who hath received from any one benefits so great , or so many , as children from their parents ? To them it is they owe their very existence ...
... kind : commonly our own children shall pay us home for it . Where shall we find the person who hath received from any one benefits so great , or so many , as children from their parents ? To them it is they owe their very existence ...
Page 21
... kind of complacency in the thing , and a sincerity which sufficiently argued he was not sorry for what he had done , that it was that violence which ob- liged him to desist from his enterprise . LIV . 1. 7. c . 4 , 5 . AMONG the ...
... kind of complacency in the thing , and a sincerity which sufficiently argued he was not sorry for what he had done , that it was that violence which ob- liged him to desist from his enterprise . LIV . 1. 7. c . 4 , 5 . AMONG the ...
Page 47
... kind ! And what a lesson is this to those who are never contented with their condition ; and who imagine they want all things , when but a single object is wanting to their insatiable avidity ! But such are the vicissitudes of human ...
... kind ! And what a lesson is this to those who are never contented with their condition ; and who imagine they want all things , when but a single object is wanting to their insatiable avidity ! But such are the vicissitudes of human ...
Page 66
... kind of charity , and therefore discovers the warmest benevolence . But Mr. Boyle's generosity and beneficence did not stop here ; it was discovered in innu- merable instances relating to the external wants and dis- tresses of his ...
... kind of charity , and therefore discovers the warmest benevolence . But Mr. Boyle's generosity and beneficence did not stop here ; it was discovered in innu- merable instances relating to the external wants and dis- tresses of his ...
Common terms and phrases
admiration affection Agesistrata Alexander ambition Antigonus army Artabazanes Astyages beauty body brother Brutus Carthaginians Cassander Clitus command conduct consul courage court cried Croesus crown cruel cruelty Cyrus Damophilus Darius daughter death desired endeavoured enemy Epaminondas esteem example Falisci father favour force fortune friendship Gauls gave give glory gods Greece hands happy hath heart HIST honour human hundred husband Julius Cæsar king king's kingdom lady laws Leonidas liberty lives lord Lysimachus Macedon manner master ment mind mother nature never noble obliged occasion officers parents passion Persians person Phocion pleasure PLUT Plutarch Polybius present prince prisoners punishment queen regard Roman Rome says Scipio senate sent SENTIMENTS slaves soldiers Solon soon suffer Tarquinii tears tenderness ther thing thou thought thousand Thrasybulus throne tion took troops tyrant victory virtue whole wife word XENOPH Xerxes young youth
Popular passages
Page 183 - And it is pity that commonly more care is had, yea, and that amongst very wise men, to find out rather a cunning man for their horse than a cunning man for their children.
Page 14 - She openeth her mouth with wisdom, and in her tongue is the law of kindness. She looketh well to the ways of her household and eateth not the bread of idleness. Her children arise up and call her blessed, her husband also, and he praiseth her.
Page 56 - I have sought the Lord night and day, that He would rather slay me than put me upon the doing of this work.
Page 188 - Train up a child in the way that he should go, and when he is old he will not depart from it.
Page 240 - Pale, cold, and half speechless in the arms of his Damon, Pythias replied in broken accents, " Fatal haste ! — Cruel impatience! — What envious powers have wrought impossibilities in your favour? But I will not be wholly disappointed. Since I cannot die to save, I will not survive you.
Page 227 - They were accompanied by three hundred and sixty five youths, agreeable to the number of days in a year, clothed in purple robes. Afterwards came a chariot consecrated to Jupiter/ drawn by white horses, and followed by a courser of a prodigious size, to whom they gave the name of the sun's horse ; and the equerries were dressed in white, each...
Page 152 - ... assured the pope that all was transacted by the express will and command of the king, it was immediately decreed that the pope should march with his cardinals to the church of St. Mark, and in the most solemn manner give thanks to God for so great a blessing conferred on the See of Rome, and the Christian world...
Page 275 - Then accosting the Spaniard, he said, " Christian, the person you have killed is my son : his body is now in my house. You ought to suffer ; but you have eaten with me, and I have given you my faith, which must not be broken.
Page 273 - Good unexpected, evils unforeseen, Appear by turns, as fortune shifts the scene: Some, rais'd aloft, come tumbling down amain; Then fall so hard, they bound and rise again.
Page 238 - This the tyrant intended peremptorily to refuse, by granting it, as he conceived, on the impossible conditions of his procuring some one to remain as hostage for his return, under equal forfeiture of life. Pythias heard the conditions, and did not wait for an application upon the part of Damon : he instantly offered himself as security for his friend; which being accepted, Damon was immediately set at liberty.