Let us only, if you please, to take leave of this subject, reflect upon this occasion on the vanity and transient glory of this habitable world. How by the force of one element breaking loose upon the rest, all the varieties of nature, all the works of... Harrison's British Classicks - الصفحة 2811786عرض كامل - لمحة عن هذا الكتاب
 | Joseph Addison, Sir Richard Steele - 1915 - عدد الصفحات: 710
...transient Glory of this habitable World, How by the Force of one Element breaking loose upon the rest, all the Vanities of Nature, all the Works of Art,...Labours of Men, are reduced to Nothing, All that we adraired and adored before as great and magnificent, No. 146, is obliterated or vanished ( and another... | |
 | Sir Henry Craik - 1917 - عدد الصفحات: 648
...habitable world ; how, by the force of one element breaking loose upon the rest, all the varieties of nature, all the works of art, all the labours of...before, as great and magnificent, is obliterated or vanished : and another form and face of things, plain, simple, and everywhere the same, overspreads... | |
 | Samuel Taylor Coleridge - 1920 - عدد الصفحات: 388
...this habitable world; how, by the force of one element breaking loose upon the rest, all the varieties of nature, all the works of art, all the labours of...before as great and magnificent, is obliterated, or vanished; and another form and face of things, plain, simple, and everywhere the same, overspreads... | |
 | Henry Fielding - 1972 - عدد الصفحات: 350
...Amores, I. xv. 26. See Spectator, 146, 'on the Vanity and transient Glory of this habitable World': 'All the Vanities of Nature, all the Works of Art, all the Labours of Men, are reduced to Nothing. . . . Rome it self, eternal Rome, the great City, the Empress of the World . . . what is become of... | |
 | عدد الصفحات: 376
...habitable world ; how, by the force of one element break1ng loose upon the rest, all the varieties of nature, all the works of art, all the labours of...before as great and magnificent, is obliterated, or vanished; and another form and face of things, plain, simple, and everywhere the same, overspreads... | |
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