| George Leopold Hurst - 1926 - 568 sayfa
...turn my eyes, myriads of happy beings crowd upon my view. 'The insect youth are on the wing.' .... Suppose, then, what I have no doubt of, each individual...gratification and pleasure have we here before our view. Of a totally different type was WILLIAM WARBURTON, 1698-1770, 'proud, pragmatical, and insolent,' a... | |
| 1855 - 848 sayfa
...what I have no doubt of, each individual of this number to be in a state of positive enjoyment, what u sum, collectively, of gratification and pleasure have we here before our view." 1 have now before me a scene which brings (what I always call) Paley's shrimp argument powerfully to... | |
| Robert Proctor - 1991 - 364 sayfa
...would be covered; with only a little less, life would be impossible. It is a happy world, after all: "What a sum, collectively, of gratification and pleasure have we here before our view! ... At this moment, in every given movement of time, how many myriads of animals are eating their food,... | |
| Colin Jager - 2007 - 304 sayfa
...lakes, and of the sea itself. These are so happy, that they know not what to do with themselves. . . . Suppose, then, what I have no doubt of, each individual...gratification and pleasure have we here before our view! (300-301 ) Describing this joyful, teeming world in mechanical language is the chief rhetorical challenge... | |
| Poetry - 1870 - 264 sayfa
...happiness, they could not have done it more intelligibly. Suppose, then, what there is no reason to doubt, each individual of this number to be in a state of...gratification and pleasure have we here before our view ! p PEOVIDENCE :— MIGRATION OF BIRDS. WHILE one part of the creation daily publishes, in the same... | |
| Harry Thurston Peck, Frank R. Stockton, Julian Hawthorne - 1901 - 434 sayfa
...to show their excess of spirits, and are simply the effects of that excess. Suppose each individual to be in a state of positive enjoyment, what a sum, collectively, of gratification and pleasure we have before our view. The young of all animals appear to me to receive pleasure simply from the... | |
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