A Complete Edition of the Poets of Great Britain..: Cook's Hesiod. Fawke's Theocritus. Anacreon. Bion. Moschus. Sappho. Musaeus & Apollonius Rhodius. The Rape of Helen. Creech's Lucretius and Grainger's Tibullus |
Kirjan sisältä
Tulokset 1 - 5 kokonaismäärästä 7
Sivu 33
Archbishop Tillo'son has judiciously told us in what fense we are to take all
doctiinesof morality ; " Aristotle,'* fays that great divine, " observ- " ed lrng since,
that moral and proverbial sayings " arc understood to be true gc-ierally, and fur
the ...
Archbishop Tillo'son has judiciously told us in what fense we are to take all
doctiinesof morality ; " Aristotle,'* fays that great divine, " observ- " ed lrng since,
that moral and proverbial sayings " arc understood to be true gc-ierally, and fur
the ...
Sivu 387
111. To the fame purpose too the great apostle himself truly and divinely
philosophises to the superstitious Athenians, Acts ivii. 18. Nay, even Aristotle, as
much an Atheist as many take him to base been, held the fame belief in his more
mature ...
111. To the fame purpose too the great apostle himself truly and divinely
philosophises to the superstitious Athenians, Acts ivii. 18. Nay, even Aristotle, as
much an Atheist as many take him to base been, held the fame belief in his more
mature ...
Sivu 559
That the heavens «re immutable and incorruptible, nay, even immaterial, and
consequently no way- obnoxious to the catastrophe which Lucretius here asserts
has always been the vulgar opinion, as well as the belief of Aristotle,
Xencpbanes.
That the heavens «re immutable and incorruptible, nay, even immaterial, and
consequently no way- obnoxious to the catastrophe which Lucretius here asserts
has always been the vulgar opinion, as well as the belief of Aristotle,
Xencpbanes.
Sivu 635
Aristotle fays, that several adhered to this opinion, which nevertheless he
confutes, lib. ii. Meteor. Empedocles held that this fire, that catches in the clouds,
is kindled by the beams of the fun : but Anaxagoras will have it descend from the
...
Aristotle fays, that several adhered to this opinion, which nevertheless he
confutes, lib. ii. Meteor. Empedocles held that this fire, that catches in the clouds,
is kindled by the beams of the fun : but Anaxagoras will have it descend from the
...
Sivu 659
I. Aristotle, Meteor, lib. ii. and Theo- irastus, as Olympiodorus, in 1st and and Me-
»r. witnesses, held the matter of wind* to an exhalation arising out of the cavities
of the "th. And this opinion most of the philosophers, ice them, have followed. II.
I. Aristotle, Meteor, lib. ii. and Theo- irastus, as Olympiodorus, in 1st and and Me-
»r. witnesses, held the matter of wind* to an exhalation arising out of the cavities
of the "th. And this opinion most of the philosophers, ice them, have followed. II.
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Æneid Amycus Anacreon ancient animals Argo argument Aristotle arms atoms beauty body breast called Chalciope charms chief Cicero Colchian colour death delight divine dread earth Epicurean Epicurus EPIGRAM ev'ry eyes fair fame fate fays fear feeds fense fire flame foul give goddess gods golden grace Greek hand heart heaven Hercules heroes Hesiod Homer honour IDYLLIUM Iliad images immortal Jason join'd Jove Jupiter king labour likewise limbs live Lucretius maid manner Medea mighty mind mortal motion move muses nature night nymphs o'er observes opinion Ovid pain passage Phrixus plain Plutarch poem poet pow'r prove Ptolemy quod reason rife round sacred Sappho seeds shore sire sleep song soul spring streams strike swain sweet thee Theocritus things thou Thrace Tiphys translation Venus verses Virgil voice void whence wind wine words