Memoirs of Benjamin Franklin, Volumen 1Harper & brothers, 1839 |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 39
Página 33
... matter , * will not receive more ; and that matter What physicians call perspirable matter is that vapour which passes off from our bodies , from the lungs , and through must remain in our bodies and occasion disea- ses ; ESSAYS . 33.
... matter , * will not receive more ; and that matter What physicians call perspirable matter is that vapour which passes off from our bodies , from the lungs , and through must remain in our bodies and occasion disea- ses ; ESSAYS . 33.
Página 35
... pass through them , we are less incommoded , such being longer tolerable . 3. When you are awakened by this uneasiness , and find you cannot easily sleep again , get out of bed , beat up and turn your pillow , shake the bed- clothes ...
... pass through them , we are less incommoded , such being longer tolerable . 3. When you are awakened by this uneasiness , and find you cannot easily sleep again , get out of bed , beat up and turn your pillow , shake the bed- clothes ...
Página 66
... pass- ing through a room where public treasure is depos- ited , a man takes the opportunity of clandestinely pocketing and carrying off a guinea , is he not truly and properly a thief ? And if another evades pay- ing into the treasury a ...
... pass- ing through a room where public treasure is depos- ited , a man takes the opportunity of clandestinely pocketing and carrying off a guinea , is he not truly and properly a thief ? And if another evades pay- ing into the treasury a ...
Página 68
... passes , im- print it in their memories , for they have no writing , and communicate it to their children . They are the records of the council , and they preserve the tradition of the stipulations in treaties a hundred years back ...
... passes , im- print it in their memories , for they have no writing , and communicate it to their children . They are the records of the council , and they preserve the tradition of the stipulations in treaties a hundred years back ...
Página 69
... passes without some confusion that makes the speaker hoarse in calling to order ; and how different from the mode of con- versation in many polite companies of Europe , where , if you do not deliver your sentence with great rapidity ...
... passes without some confusion that makes the speaker hoarse in calling to order ; and how different from the mode of con- versation in many polite companies of Europe , where , if you do not deliver your sentence with great rapidity ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todo
Términos y frases comunes
acquainted affairs America appear become body called Catania cause centrifugal force clouds cold conductors continue David Hartley dear friend degree descending earth earthquakes endeavour England equal esteem farther favour fire fluid force Francis Hopkinson FRANKLIN give Glaucon globe gout hand happiness heat Hence honour hope imagine industry kind letter king king's counsel labour land late leave less light live Lord Kames Marquis de Lafayette matter ment mind motion nation nature necessary never New-York obliged observed occasion opinion paper Parliament particles pass Passy perhaps person Philadelphia Philosophical pleasure Poor Richard says present punishment pyrites quantity reason received rising river salt seawater Socrates soon spiracles spout Star Chamber suppose surface things thought tion vapour virtue warm whirl whirlwind wind wish write