The Weekly Monitor, Entertaining and Instructive: Designed to be Interesting to All, But Particularly Intended as a Guide to Youth in the Ways of Morality and Religion, Tom 1Farnham and Badger., 1817 - 214 |
Z wnętrza książki
Wyniki 1 - 5 z 29
Strona 9
... principles in their minds while they are young . If this is neglected , if children are suffered to run the chance of corruption , schools or other sources of learning are of no use - are , in fact , a curse rather than a blessing ; for ...
... principles in their minds while they are young . If this is neglected , if children are suffered to run the chance of corruption , schools or other sources of learning are of no use - are , in fact , a curse rather than a blessing ; for ...
Strona 18
... Creation is but a field spread before him for an infinitely varied display of love . This is the harmonizing principle , which reduces to unity and sim- plicity the vast diversity of nature ; this is the 18 THE WEEKLY MONITOR .
... Creation is but a field spread before him for an infinitely varied display of love . This is the harmonizing principle , which reduces to unity and sim- plicity the vast diversity of nature ; this is the 18 THE WEEKLY MONITOR .
Strona 23
... principle . When a man shall be just about to quit the stage of this world , to put off his mortality , and to deliver up his last accounts to God ; at which sad time his memory shall serve him for little else , but to terrify him with ...
... principle . When a man shall be just about to quit the stage of this world , to put off his mortality , and to deliver up his last accounts to God ; at which sad time his memory shall serve him for little else , but to terrify him with ...
Strona 25
... principle of diminishing the sum of human happiness . By which rule we are forbidden . 1. To enjoin unnecessary labour or confinement , from the mere love and wantonness of domination ; 2. To insult our servants by harsh , scornful , or ...
... principle of diminishing the sum of human happiness . By which rule we are forbidden . 1. To enjoin unnecessary labour or confinement , from the mere love and wantonness of domination ; 2. To insult our servants by harsh , scornful , or ...
Strona 26
... principle , are also forbidden causeless or im- moderate anger , habitual peevishness , and groundless suspicion . GRATITUDE . EXAMPLES of ingratitude check and discourage voluntary benefi- cence and in this the mischief of ingratitude ...
... principle , are also forbidden causeless or im- moderate anger , habitual peevishness , and groundless suspicion . GRATITUDE . EXAMPLES of ingratitude check and discourage voluntary benefi- cence and in this the mischief of ingratitude ...
Kluczowe wyrazy i wyrażenia
affection aged ANTIMACHUS beauty behold better than heaven blessed bosom called Cambridgeport Capt character Charlestown child children of men Christian comfort conduct creatures daugh daughter dear death Deist delight desire Divine Authority Dorchester duty earth endeavour enemy enjoyment ENTERTAINING AND INSTRUCTIVE eternity evil faith father favour fear feel friendship give glory gospel hand happiness hath heart heaven Helim holy honour hope human imagination infinite king lady live look Lord mankind Mardonius marriage Mary mind miserable Miss Miss Elizabeth MORAL DEPARTMENT morning nature neglect ness never night parents passion peace Perryvale pleasure Poison'd Porus principles reason religion RELIGIOUS DEPARTMENT replied rich Rowland Hill Sir Walter Raleigh smile sorrow soul spirit tear temper tender thee thing thou art tion truth vanity vice virtue virtuous WEEKLY MONITOR wife wish word Xerxes young youth Zieten
Popularne fragmenty
Strona 128 - And dear to me the loud Amen, Which echoes through the blest abode, Which swells and sinks, and swells again, Dies on the walls, but lives to God.
Strona 164 - My son, keep thy father's commandment, and forsake not the law of thy mother: bind them continually upon thine heart, and tie them about thy neck. When thou goest, it shall lead thee ; when thou sleepest, it shall keep thee ; and when thou awakest, it shall talk with thee. For the commandment is a lamp; and the law is light; and reproofs of instruction are the way of life...
Strona 9 - A GOOD conscience is to the soul what health is to the body : it preserves a constant ease and serenity within us, and more than countervails all the calamities and afflictions which can possibly befall us.
Strona 204 - God, and perhaps grope after him, and find him, though he is not far from any one of us. For in him we live and move and have our being, as indeed some of your own poets have said, 'For we are also his offspring.
Strona 80 - OH, happy shades — to me unblest ! Friendly to peace, but not to me ! How ill the scene that offers rest, And heart that cannot rest, agree...
Strona 201 - ... are gone, and with them, not only the joys they knew, but many of the friends who gave them. You have entered upon the autumn of your being, and whatever may have been the profusion of your spring, or the warm intemperance of your summer, there is yet a season of stillness and of solitude which the beneficence of Heaven affords you, in which you may meditate upon the past and the future, and prepare yourselves for the mighty change which you are soon to undergo.
Strona 121 - At the siege of Namur by the Allies, there were in the ranks of the company commanded by Captain Pincent, in Colonel Frederick Hamilton's regiment, one Unnion a corporal, and one Valentine a private sentinel: there happened between these two men a dispute about a matter of love, which, upon some aggravations, grew to an irreconcilable hatred.
Strona 199 - From this first impression there is a second which naturally follows it; in the day we are living with men, in the eventide we begin to live with nature; we see the world withdrawn from us, the shades of night darken over the habitations of men, and we feel ourselves alone. It is an hour fitted, as it would seem, by Him who made us to still, but with gentle hand, the throb of every unruly passion, and the ardour of every impure desire; and, while it veils.
Strona 154 - ... to vary the name ; for I feared lest it should be looked on as a vanity in me, and not as a respect in the king, as it truly was, to my father, whom he often mentions with praise.
Strona 201 - If he had wished our misery, he might have made sure of his purpose, by forming our senses to be so many sores and pains to us, as they are now instruments of gratification and enjoyment ; or by placing us amidst objects, so ill suited to our perceptions as to have continually offended us...