author: epictetus

Harvard Classics Anthology - Complete 51 Volumes: The Greatest Works of World Literature - Dr. Eliot's Five Foot Shelf

Johann Wolfgang von GoetheGotthold Ephraim LessingThomas CarlylePlatoRené DescartesImmanuel KantCharles DarwinMartin LutherRobert Louis StevensonWilliam ShakespeareDante AlighieriEuripidesPercy Bysshe ShelleyCharles LambHenry David ThoreauSamuel JohnsonJohn Stuart MillDavid HumeJoseph AddisonJohn LockeJohn FletcherFrancis BeaumontLeigh HuntEpictetusThomas De QuinceySamuel Taylor ColeridgeJonathan SwiftChristopher MarloweJacob GrimmWilhelm GrimmWilliam HazlittMarcus Tullius CiceroDaniel DefoeAesopRichard Henry DanaJohn DrydenPhilip MassingerPedro Calderón de la BarcaJohn RuskinOliver Wendell HolmesErnest RenanRobert BurnsDavid GarrickRalph Waldo EmersonJohn WebsterIzaak WaltonJohn BunyanJames Russell LowellCharles Augustin Sainte-BeuveHomerEdmund BurkePlutarchMolièreAeschylusMichael FaradaySophoclesWilliam Makepeace ThackerayBenjamin FranklinPierre CorneilleJean RacineVoltaireRobert BrowningOliver GoldsmithThomas DekkerJohn MiltonAristophanesBlaise PascalVirgilRichard Brinsley SheridanSimon NewcombWilliam PennWalter BiggesPhilip SidneyHerodotusWalter RaleighFrancis BaconGiuseppe MazziniFrancis PrettyGeorge BerkeleyThomas HobbesAdam SmithAlessandro ManzoniAbraham CowleyMichel de MontaigneBen JonsonJohn WoolmanBenvenuto CelliniSydney SmithJean FroissartWilliam Henry HarrisonWilliam HarveyMarcus AureliusHans Christian AndersenThomas MaloryGeorge Gordon ByronThomas à KempisRichard SteeleThomas BrowneArchibald GeikieThomas Babington MacaulayTacitusWilliam RoperHippocratesMiguel de CervantesThomas MoreFriedrich von SchillerPhilip NicholsLouis PasteurJoseph ListerJean Jacques RousseauPliny the YoungerEdgar Alan PoeSaint AugustineHermann Ludwig Ferdinand von HelmholtzFrancis DrakeEdward HaiesNiccolo MachiavelliAmbroise ParéWilliam A. Neilson
... a sensuous man than by making him first aesthetic. But, you might object: Is this mediation absolutely indispensable? Could not truth and duty, one or the other, in themselves and by themselves, find access to the sensuous man? To this ...

The Complete Harvard Classics - All 51 Volumes in One Edition: The Anthology of the Greatest Works of World Literature - Dr. Eliot's Five Foot Shelf

Johann Wolfgang von GoetheGotthold Ephraim LessingThomas CarlylePlatoRené DescartesImmanuel KantCharles DarwinMartin LutherRobert Louis StevensonWilliam ShakespeareDante AlighieriEuripidesPercy Bysshe ShelleyCharles LambHenry David ThoreauSamuel JohnsonJohn Stuart MillDavid HumeJoseph AddisonJohn LockeJohn FletcherFrancis BeaumontLeigh HuntEpictetusThomas De QuinceySamuel Taylor ColeridgeJonathan SwiftChristopher MarloweJacob GrimmWilhelm GrimmWilliam HazlittMarcus Tullius CiceroDaniel DefoeAesopRichard Henry DanaJohn DrydenPhilip MassingerPedro Calderón de la BarcaJohn RuskinOliver Wendell HolmesErnest RenanRobert BurnsDavid GarrickRalph Waldo EmersonJohn WebsterIzaak WaltonJohn BunyanJames Russell LowellCharles Augustin Sainte-BeuveHomerEdmund BurkePlutarchMolièreAeschylusMichael FaradaySophoclesWilliam Makepeace ThackerayBenjamin FranklinPierre CorneilleJean RacineVoltaireRobert BrowningOliver GoldsmithThomas DekkerJohn MiltonAristophanesBlaise PascalVirgilRichard Brinsley SheridanSimon NewcombWilliam PennWalter BiggesPhilip SidneyHerodotusWalter RaleighFrancis BaconGiuseppe MazziniFrancis PrettyGeorge BerkeleyThomas HobbesAdam SmithAlessandro ManzoniAbraham CowleyMichel de MontaigneBen JonsonJohn WoolmanBenvenuto CelliniSydney SmithJean FroissartWilliam Henry HarrisonWilliam HarveyMarcus AureliusHans Christian AndersenThomas MaloryGeorge Gordon ByronThomas à KempisRichard SteeleThomas BrowneArchibald GeikieThomas Babington MacaulayTacitusWilliam RoperHippocratesMiguel de CervantesThomas MoreFriedrich von SchillerPhilip NicholsLouis PasteurJoseph ListerJean Jacques RousseauPliny the YoungerEdgar Alan PoeSaint AugustineHermann Ludwig Ferdinand von HelmholtzFrancis DrakeEdward HaiesNiccolo MachiavelliAmbroise ParéWilliam A. Neilson
... a sensuous man than by making him first aesthetic. But, you might object: Is this mediation absolutely indispensable? Could not truth and duty, one or the other, in themselves and by themselves, find access to the sensuous man? To this ...

Harvard Classics: All 71 Volumes

Johann Wolfgang von GoetheGotthold Ephraim LessingBjørnstjerne BjørnsonThomas CarlyleTheodor StormPlatoTheodor FontaneRené DescartesGottfried KellerMark TwainImmanuel KantCharles DarwinMartin LutherRobert Louis StevensonWilliam ShakespeareDante AlighieriEuripidesPercy Bysshe ShelleyCharles LambHenry David ThoreauHenry JamesSamuel JohnsonJohn Stuart MillVictor HugoDavid HumeJoseph AddisonJane AustenJohn LockeJohn FletcherFrancis BeaumontLeigh HuntEpictetusAlphonse DaudetThomas De QuinceyGuy de MaupassantGeorge EliotWalter ScottLaurence SterneSamuel Taylor ColeridgeJonathan SwiftChristopher MarloweWilhelm GrimmWilliam HazlittMarcus Tullius CiceroDaniel DefoeAesopRichard Henry DanaHenry FieldingJohn DrydenPhilip MassingerPedro Calderón de la BarcaBret HarteGeorge SandJohn RuskinOliver Wendell HolmesErnest RenanRobert BurnsDavid GarrickRalph Waldo EmersonJohn WebsterWashington IrvingIzaak WaltonJohn BunyanJuan ValeraAlfred de MussetJames Russell LowellCharles Augustin Sainte-BeuveNathaniel HawthorneHomerEdmund BurkePlutarchMolièreAeschylusMichael FaradaySophoclesWilliam Makepeace ThackerayBenjamin FranklinEdward Everett HalePierre CorneilleJean RacineVoltaireRobert BrowningOliver GoldsmithThomas DekkerJohn MiltonAristophanesBlaise PascalVirgilRichard Brinsley SheridanSimon NewcombWilliam PennWalter BiggesPhilip SidneyHerodotusWalter RaleighFrancis BaconGiuseppe MazziniFrancis PrettyGeorge BerkeleyThomas HobbesAdam SmithAlessandro ManzoniAbraham CowleyMichel de MontaigneBen JonsonJohn WoolmanBenvenuto CelliniSydney SmithJean FroissartWilliam Henry HarrisonWilliam HarveyMarcus AureliusHans Christian AndersenThomas MaloryGeorge Gordon ByronThomas à KempisIvan TurgenevRichard SteeleThomas BrowneArchibald GeikieThomas Babington MacaulayLeo TolstoyFyodor DostoevskyTacitusWilliam RoperHippocratesMiguel de CervantesThomas MoreFriedrich von SchillerPhilip NicholsLouis PasteurJoseph ListerJean Jacques RousseauPliny the YoungerCharles W. EliotEdgar Alan PoeSaint AugustineHermann Ludwig Ferdinand von HelmholtzFrancis DrakeEdward HaiesNiccolo MachiavelliAmbroise ParéWilliam A. NeilsonHonoré BalzacAlexander L. Kielland
... a sensuous man than by making him first aesthetic. But, you might object: Is this mediation absolutely indispensable? Could not truth and duty, one or the other, in themselves and by themselves, find access to the sensuous man? To this ...

The Harvard Classics Shelf: All 51 Volumes of Essential Classics + 20 Volumes of the Greatest Works of Fiction

Johann Wolfgang von GoetheGotthold Ephraim LessingBjørnstjerne BjørnsonThomas CarlyleTheodor StormPlatoTheodor FontaneRené DescartesGottfried KellerMark TwainImmanuel KantCharles DarwinMartin LutherRobert Louis StevensonWilliam ShakespeareDante AlighieriEuripidesPercy Bysshe ShelleyCharles LambHenry David ThoreauHenry JamesSamuel JohnsonJohn Stuart MillVictor HugoDavid HumeJoseph AddisonJane AustenJohn LockeJohn FletcherFrancis BeaumontLeigh HuntEpictetusAlphonse DaudetThomas De QuinceyGuy de MaupassantGeorge EliotWalter ScottLaurence SterneSamuel Taylor ColeridgeJonathan SwiftChristopher MarloweWilhelm GrimmWilliam HazlittMarcus Tullius CiceroDaniel DefoeAesopRichard Henry DanaHenry FieldingJohn DrydenPhilip MassingerPedro Calderón de la BarcaBret HarteGeorge SandJohn RuskinOliver Wendell HolmesErnest RenanRobert BurnsDavid GarrickRalph Waldo EmersonJohn WebsterWashington IrvingIzaak WaltonJohn BunyanJuan ValeraAlfred de MussetJames Russell LowellCharles Augustin Sainte-BeuveNathaniel HawthorneHomerEdmund BurkePlutarchMolièreAeschylusMichael FaradaySophoclesWilliam Makepeace ThackerayBenjamin FranklinEdward Everett HalePierre CorneilleJean RacineVoltaireRobert BrowningOliver GoldsmithThomas DekkerJohn MiltonAristophanesBlaise PascalVirgilRichard Brinsley SheridanSimon NewcombWilliam PennWalter BiggesPhilip SidneyHerodotusWalter RaleighFrancis BaconGiuseppe MazziniFrancis PrettyGeorge BerkeleyThomas HobbesAdam SmithAlessandro ManzoniAbraham CowleyMichel de MontaigneBen JonsonJohn WoolmanBenvenuto CelliniSydney SmithJean FroissartWilliam Henry HarrisonWilliam HarveyMarcus AureliusHans Christian AndersenThomas MaloryGeorge Gordon ByronThomas à KempisIvan TurgenevRichard SteeleThomas BrowneArchibald GeikieThomas Babington MacaulayLeo TolstoyFyodor DostoevskyTacitusWilliam RoperHippocratesMiguel de CervantesThomas MoreFriedrich von SchillerPhilip NicholsLouis PasteurJoseph ListerJean Jacques RousseauPliny the YoungerCharles W. EliotEdgar Alan PoeSaint AugustineHermann Ludwig Ferdinand von HelmholtzFrancis DrakeEdward HaiesNiccolo MachiavelliAmbroise ParéWilliam A. NeilsonHonoré BalzacAlexander L. Kielland
... a sensuous man than by making him first aesthetic. But, you might object: Is this mediation absolutely indispensable? Could not truth and duty, one or the other, in themselves and by themselves, find access to the sensuous man? To this ...

The Complete Harvard Classics Shelf: 51 Volumes of Essential Classics + 20 Volumes of the Greatest Works of Fiction

Johann Wolfgang von GoetheGotthold Ephraim LessingBjørnstjerne BjørnsonThomas CarlyleTheodor StormPlatoTheodor FontaneRené DescartesGottfried KellerMark TwainImmanuel KantCharles DarwinMartin LutherRobert Louis StevensonWilliam ShakespeareDante AlighieriEuripidesPercy Bysshe ShelleyCharles LambHenry David ThoreauHenry JamesSamuel JohnsonJohn Stuart MillVictor HugoDavid HumeJoseph AddisonJane AustenJohn LockeJohn FletcherFrancis BeaumontLeigh HuntEpictetusAlphonse DaudetThomas De QuinceyGuy de MaupassantGeorge EliotWalter ScottLaurence SterneSamuel Taylor ColeridgeJonathan SwiftChristopher MarloweWilhelm GrimmWilliam HazlittMarcus Tullius CiceroDaniel DefoeAesopRichard Henry DanaHenry FieldingJohn DrydenPhilip MassingerPedro Calderón de la BarcaBret HarteGeorge SandJohn RuskinOliver Wendell HolmesErnest RenanRobert BurnsDavid GarrickRalph Waldo EmersonJohn WebsterWashington IrvingIzaak WaltonJohn BunyanJuan ValeraAlfred de MussetJames Russell LowellCharles Augustin Sainte-BeuveNathaniel HawthorneHomerEdmund BurkePlutarchMolièreAeschylusMichael FaradaySophoclesWilliam Makepeace ThackerayBenjamin FranklinEdward Everett HalePierre CorneilleJean RacineVoltaireRobert BrowningOliver GoldsmithThomas DekkerJohn MiltonAristophanesBlaise PascalVirgilRichard Brinsley SheridanSimon NewcombWilliam PennWalter BiggesPhilip SidneyHerodotusWalter RaleighFrancis BaconGiuseppe MazziniFrancis PrettyGeorge BerkeleyThomas HobbesAdam SmithAlessandro ManzoniAbraham CowleyMichel de MontaigneBen JonsonJohn WoolmanBenvenuto CelliniSydney SmithJean FroissartWilliam Henry HarrisonWilliam HarveyMarcus AureliusHans Christian AndersenThomas MaloryGeorge Gordon ByronThomas à KempisIvan TurgenevRichard SteeleThomas BrowneArchibald GeikieThomas Babington MacaulayLeo TolstoyFyodor DostoevskyTacitusWilliam RoperHippocratesMiguel de CervantesThomas MoreFriedrich von SchillerPhilip NicholsLouis PasteurJoseph ListerJean Jacques RousseauPliny the YoungerCharles W. EliotEdgar Alan PoeSaint AugustineHermann Ludwig Ferdinand von HelmholtzFrancis DrakeEdward HaiesNiccolo MachiavelliAmbroise ParéWilliam A. NeilsonHonoré BalzacAlexander L. Kielland
... a sensuous man than by making him first aesthetic. But, you might object: Is this mediation absolutely indispensable? Could not truth and duty, one or the other, in themselves and by themselves, find access to the sensuous man? To this ...

Harvard's Classics Collection: Complete 71 Volumes: The Five Foot Shelf & The Shelf of Fiction - The Classic Literature & The Greatest Works of Fiction from Antics to Modern Age

Johann Wolfgang von GoetheGotthold Ephraim LessingBjørnstjerne BjørnsonThomas CarlyleTheodor StormPlatoTheodor FontaneRené DescartesGottfried KellerMark TwainImmanuel KantCharles DarwinMartin LutherRobert Louis StevensonWilliam ShakespeareDante AlighieriEuripidesPercy Bysshe ShelleyCharles LambHenry David ThoreauHenry JamesSamuel JohnsonJohn Stuart MillVictor HugoDavid HumeJoseph AddisonJane AustenJohn LockeJohn FletcherFrancis BeaumontLeigh HuntEpictetusAlphonse DaudetThomas De QuinceyGuy de MaupassantGeorge EliotWalter ScottLaurence SterneSamuel Taylor ColeridgeJonathan SwiftChristopher MarloweWilhelm GrimmWilliam HazlittMarcus Tullius CiceroDaniel DefoeAesopRichard Henry DanaHenry FieldingJohn DrydenPhilip MassingerPedro Calderón de la BarcaBret HarteGeorge SandJohn RuskinOliver Wendell HolmesErnest RenanRobert BurnsDavid GarrickRalph Waldo EmersonJohn WebsterWashington IrvingIzaak WaltonJohn BunyanJuan ValeraAlfred de MussetJames Russell LowellCharles Augustin Sainte-BeuveNathaniel HawthorneHomerEdmund BurkePlutarchMolièreAeschylusMichael FaradaySophoclesWilliam Makepeace ThackerayBenjamin FranklinEdward Everett HalePierre CorneilleJean RacineVoltaireRobert BrowningOliver GoldsmithThomas DekkerJohn MiltonAristophanesBlaise PascalVirgilRichard Brinsley SheridanSimon NewcombWilliam PennWalter BiggesPhilip SidneyHerodotusWalter RaleighFrancis BaconGiuseppe MazziniFrancis PrettyGeorge BerkeleyThomas HobbesAdam SmithAlessandro ManzoniAbraham CowleyMichel de MontaigneBen JonsonJohn WoolmanBenvenuto CelliniSydney SmithJean FroissartWilliam Henry HarrisonWilliam HarveyMarcus AureliusHans Christian AndersenThomas MaloryGeorge Gordon ByronThomas à KempisIvan TurgenevRichard SteeleThomas BrowneArchibald GeikieThomas Babington MacaulayLeo TolstoyFyodor DostoevskyTacitusWilliam RoperHippocratesMiguel de CervantesThomas MoreFriedrich von SchillerPhilip NicholsLouis PasteurJoseph ListerJean Jacques RousseauPliny the YoungerCharles W. EliotEdgar Alan PoeSaint AugustineHermann Ludwig Ferdinand von HelmholtzFrancis DrakeEdward HaiesNiccolo MachiavelliAmbroise ParéWilliam A. NeilsonHonoré BalzacAlexander L. Kielland
... a sensuous man than by making him first aesthetic. But, you might object: Is this mediation absolutely indispensable? Could not truth and duty, one or the other, in themselves and by themselves, find access to the sensuous man? To this ...

Discourses, Fragments, Handbook

Epictetus. Muses (11), and retells mythological or epic stories, e.g. the death of Achilles (35), or dramatic episodes ... 3.5.17. 3.23.23 discourse . . . house of Quadratus: recitations in the houses of rich men were common in the Roman ...

The Apology, Phaedo, and Crito of Plato

... something else .. 20. Everything which is in any way beautiful is beautiful in itself , and terminates in itself , not having praise as part of itself . Neither worse then nor better is a 216 THE MEDITATIONS OF MARCUS AURELIUS.

Harvard Classics Anthology - Complete 51 Volumes: The Greatest Works of World Literature - Dr. Eliot's Five Foot Shelf

Johann Wolfgang von GoetheGotthold Ephraim LessingThomas CarlylePlatoRené DescartesImmanuel KantCharles DarwinMartin LutherRobert Louis StevensonWilliam ShakespeareDante AlighieriEuripidesPercy Bysshe ShelleyCharles LambHenry David ThoreauSamuel JohnsonJohn Stuart MillDavid HumeJoseph AddisonJohn LockeJohn FletcherFrancis BeaumontLeigh HuntEpictetusThomas De QuinceySamuel Taylor ColeridgeJonathan SwiftChristopher MarloweJacob GrimmWilhelm GrimmWilliam HazlittMarcus Tullius CiceroDaniel DefoeAesopRichard Henry DanaJohn DrydenPhilip MassingerPedro Calderón de la BarcaJohn RuskinOliver Wendell HolmesErnest RenanRobert BurnsDavid GarrickRalph Waldo EmersonJohn WebsterIzaak WaltonJohn BunyanJames Russell LowellCharles Augustin Sainte-BeuveHomerEdmund BurkePlutarchMolièreAeschylusMichael FaradaySophoclesWilliam Makepeace ThackerayBenjamin FranklinPierre CorneilleJean RacineVoltaireRobert BrowningOliver GoldsmithThomas DekkerJohn MiltonAristophanesBlaise PascalVirgilRichard Brinsley SheridanSimon NewcombWilliam PennWalter BiggesPhilip SidneyHerodotusWalter RaleighFrancis BaconGiuseppe MazziniFrancis PrettyGeorge BerkeleyThomas HobbesAdam SmithAlessandro ManzoniAbraham CowleyMichel de MontaigneBen JonsonJohn WoolmanBenvenuto CelliniSydney SmithJean FroissartWilliam Henry HarrisonWilliam HarveyMarcus AureliusHans Christian AndersenThomas MaloryGeorge Gordon ByronThomas à KempisRichard SteeleThomas BrowneArchibald GeikieThomas Babington MacaulayTacitusWilliam RoperHippocratesMiguel de CervantesThomas MoreFriedrich von SchillerPhilip NicholsLouis PasteurJoseph ListerJean Jacques RousseauPliny the YoungerEdgar Alan PoeSaint AugustineHermann Ludwig Ferdinand von HelmholtzFrancis DrakeEdward HaiesNiccolo MachiavelliAmbroise ParéWilliam A. Neilson
... Egmont is discovered sleeping on a couch. A rustling of keys is heard; the ... imagination and belief. Silva (takes the sentence from an attendant, unfolds ... Egmont. Can the king transfer that authority? Silva. "We declare, after a ...

Harvard Classics: Complete 51-Volume Anthology: The Greatest Works of World Literature

Johann Wolfgang von GoetheGotthold Ephraim LessingThomas CarlylePlatoRené DescartesImmanuel KantCharles DarwinMartin LutherRobert Louis StevensonWilliam ShakespeareDante AlighieriEuripidesPercy Bysshe ShelleyCharles LambHenry David ThoreauSamuel JohnsonJohn Stuart MillDavid HumeJoseph AddisonJohn LockeJohn FletcherFrancis BeaumontLeigh HuntEpictetusThomas De QuinceySamuel Taylor ColeridgeJonathan SwiftChristopher MarloweJacob GrimmWilhelm GrimmWilliam HazlittMarcus Tullius CiceroDaniel DefoeAesopRichard Henry DanaJohn DrydenPhilip MassingerPedro Calderón de la BarcaJohn RuskinOliver Wendell HolmesErnest RenanRobert BurnsDavid GarrickRalph Waldo EmersonJohn WebsterIzaak WaltonJohn BunyanJames Russell LowellCharles Augustin Sainte-BeuveHomerEdmund BurkePlutarchMolièreAeschylusMichael FaradaySophoclesWilliam Makepeace ThackerayBenjamin FranklinPierre CorneilleJean RacineVoltaireRobert BrowningOliver GoldsmithThomas DekkerJohn MiltonAristophanesBlaise PascalVirgilSimon NewcombWilliam PennWalter BiggesPhilip SidneyHerodotusWalter RaleighFrancis BaconGiuseppe MazziniFrancis PrettyGeorge BerkeleyThomas HobbesAdam SmithAlessandro ManzoniAbraham CowleyMichel de MontaigneBen JonsonJohn WoolmanBenvenuto CelliniSydney SmithJean FroissartWilliam Henry HarrisonWilliam HarveyMarcus AureliusHans Christian AndersenThomas MaloryGeorge Gordon ByronThomas à KempisRichard SteeleThomas BrowneArchibald GeikieThomas Babington MacaulayTacitusWilliam RoperHippocratesMiguel de CervantesThomas MoreFriedrich von SchillerPhilip NicholsLouis PasteurJoseph ListerJean Jacques RousseauPliny the YoungerEdgar Alan PoeSaint AugustineBrinsley SheridanHermann Ludwig Ferdinand von HelmholtzFrancis DrakeEdward HaiesNiccolo MachiavelliAmbroise ParéWilliam A. Neilson
... sweet wee Donald, Picture o' the great Clanronald; Brawlie kens our wanton Chief Wha gat my young Highland thief. Leeze me on thy bonie craigie, An' thou live, thou'll steal ... score o'kye, Ochon, Ochon, Ochrie! Feeding on you hill sae high, ...

Harvard Classics (All 51 Volumes)

Johann Wolfgang von GoetheGotthold Ephraim LessingThomas CarlylePlatoRené DescartesImmanuel KantCharles DarwinMartin LutherRobert Louis StevensonWilliam ShakespeareDante AlighieriEuripidesPercy Bysshe ShelleyCharles LambHenry David ThoreauSamuel JohnsonJohn Stuart MillDavid HumeJoseph AddisonJohn LockeJohn FletcherFrancis BeaumontLeigh HuntEpictetusThomas De QuinceySamuel Taylor ColeridgeJonathan SwiftChristopher MarloweJacob GrimmWilhelm GrimmWilliam HazlittMarcus Tullius CiceroDaniel DefoeAesopRichard Henry DanaJohn DrydenPhilip MassingerPedro Calderón de la BarcaJohn RuskinOliver Wendell HolmesErnest RenanRobert BurnsDavid GarrickRalph Waldo EmersonJohn WebsterIzaak WaltonJohn BunyanJames Russell LowellCharles Augustin Sainte-BeuveHomerEdmund BurkePlutarchMolièreAeschylusMichael FaradaySophoclesWilliam Makepeace ThackerayBenjamin FranklinPierre CorneilleJean RacineVoltaireRobert BrowningOliver GoldsmithThomas DekkerJohn MiltonAristophanesBlaise PascalVirgilSimon NewcombWilliam PennWalter BiggesPhilip SidneyHerodotusWalter RaleighFrancis BaconGiuseppe MazziniFrancis PrettyGeorge BerkeleyThomas HobbesAdam SmithAlessandro ManzoniAbraham CowleyMichel de MontaigneBen JonsonJohn WoolmanBenvenuto CelliniSydney SmithJean FroissartWilliam Henry HarrisonWilliam HarveyMarcus AureliusHans Christian AndersenThomas MaloryGeorge Gordon ByronThomas à KempisRichard SteeleThomas BrowneArchibald GeikieThomas Babington MacaulayTacitusWilliam RoperHippocratesMiguel de CervantesThomas MoreFriedrich von SchillerPhilip NicholsLouis PasteurJoseph ListerJean Jacques RousseauPliny the YoungerEdgar Alan PoeSaint AugustineBrinsley SheridanHermann Ludwig Ferdinand von HelmholtzFrancis DrakeEdward HaiesNiccolo MachiavelliAmbroise ParéWilliam A. Neilson
... Dana, John Dryden, Philip Massinger, Pedro Calderón de la Barca, John Ruskin, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Ernest Renan ... Bracy! bard Bracy! your horses are fleet, Ye must ride up the hall, your music so sweet, More loud than your horses ...

The Harvard Classics Anthology: 51 Volumes of Nonfiction Books + 20 Volumes of the Greatest Works of Fiction

Johann Wolfgang von GoetheGotthold Ephraim LessingBjørnstjerne BjørnsonThomas CarlyleTheodor StormCharles DickensPlatoTheodor FontaneRené DescartesGottfried KellerMark TwainImmanuel KantCharles DarwinMartin LutherRobert Louis StevensonWilliam ShakespeareDante AlighieriEuripidesPercy Bysshe ShelleyCharles LambHenry David ThoreauHenry JamesSamuel JohnsonJohn Stuart MillVictor HugoJoseph AddisonJane AustenJohn LockeJohn FletcherFrancis BeaumontLeigh HuntEpictetusAlphonse DaudetThomas De QuinceyGuy de MaupassantGeorge EliotWalter ScottLaurence SterneSamuel Taylor ColeridgeJonathan SwiftChristopher MarloweJacob GrimmWilhelm GrimmWilliam HazlittMarcus Tullius CiceroDaniel DefoeAesopRichard Henry DanaHenry FieldingJohn DrydenPhilip MassingerPedro Calderón de la BarcaBret HarteGeorge SandJohn RuskinOliver Wendell HolmesErnest RenanRobert BurnsDavid GarrickRalph Waldo EmersonJohn WebsterWashington IrvingIzaak WaltonJohn BunyanJuan ValeraAlfred de MussetJames Russell LowellCharles Augustin Sainte-BeuveNathaniel HawthorneHomerEdmund BurkePlutarchMolièreAeschylusMichael FaradaySophoclesWilliam Makepeace ThackerayBenjamin FranklinEdward Everett HalePierre CorneilleJean RacineVoltaireRobert BrowningOliver GoldsmithThomas DekkerJohn MiltonAristophanesBlaise PascalVirgilRichard Brinsley SheridanSimon NewcombWilliam PennWalter BiggesPhilip SidneyHerodotusWalter RaleighFrancis BaconGiuseppe MazziniFrancis PrettyGeorge BerkeleyThomas HobbesAdam SmithAlessandro ManzoniAbraham CowleyMichel de MontaigneBen JonsonJohn WoolmanBenvenuto CelliniSydney SmithJean FroissartWilliam Henry HarrisonWilliam HarveyMarcus AureliusHans Christian AndersenThomas MaloryGeorge Gordon ByronThomas à KempisIvan TurgenevRichard SteeleThomas BrowneArchibald GeikieThomas Babington MacaulayLeo TolstoyFyodor DostoevskyTacitusWilliam RoperHippocratesMiguel de CervantesThomas MoreFriedrich von SchillerPhilip NicholsLouis PasteurJoseph ListerJean Jacques RousseauPliny the YoungerCharles W. EliotEdgar Alan PoeSaint AugustineHermann Ludwig Ferdinand von HelmholtzFrancis DrakeEdward HaiesNiccolo MachiavelliAmbroise ParéWilliam A. NeilsonHonoré BalzacAlexander L. Kielland
... Dana, Henry Fielding, John Dryden, Philip Massinger, Pedro Calderón de la Barca, Bret Harte, George Sand, John ... Bracy! bard Bracy! your horses are fleet, Ye must ride up the hall, your music so sweet, More loud than your horses ...

Yale Required Reading - Collected Works (Vol. 1)

... blood , for it was not the feeblest of the Achaeans who struck him . The sire of gods and men had pity on him , and ... Olympus were in a fury , but they could not reach you to set you free ; when I caught any one of them I gripped him ...

Epictetus His Morals: With Simplicius His Comment

... true Cafe of External Objects . And wherefoever the Defire , or the Averfion fixes , whether it be a Vertuous and Reasonable , or whether a Vicious and Unnatural one , That , to be fure , is what we apprehend to be our Good , and our ...

Lucretius: On the Nature of Things

... chords subtending them in terms of the diam- eter's assumed 120 parts . The third column will contain the thirtieth ... 1612 Chords 17 13 9 0 1 2 10 Sixtieths 1 1 2 50 0 1 2 50 17 17 44 14 0 1 2 22 12 1 34 15 0 1 2 50 172 18 15 17 0 1 2 ...

Yale Classics (Vol. 1)

... wrath against the Immortals , for now she contrives a mighty deed , to destroy the feeble tribes of earth - born men by withholding the seed under the earth . Thereby the honours of the Gods are minished , and fierce is her wrath , nor ...

Yale Required Reading - Collected Works (Vol. 1)

... wrath against the Immortals , for now she contrives a mighty deed , to destroy the feeble tribes of earth - born men by withholding the seed under the earth . Thereby the honours of the Gods are minished , and fierce is her wrath , nor ...

Yale Classics - The Greatest Works of Ancient Greece

... wrath against the Immortals , for now she contrives a mighty deed , to destroy the feeble tribes of earth - born men by withholding the seed under the earth . Thereby the honours of the Gods are minished , and fierce is her wrath , nor ...

Yale Required Reading - Collected Works (Vol. 1)

... XXX. CUPID once upon a bed Of roses laid his weary head; Luckless urchin, not to see Within the leaves a slumbering bee! The bee awaked—with anger wild The bee awaked, and stung the child. Loud and piteous are his cries; To Venus quick ...

Yale Classics (Vol. 1)

... XXX. CUPID once upon a bed Of roses laid his weary head; Luckless urchin, not to see Within the leaves a slumbering bee! The bee awaked—with anger wild The bee awaked, and stung the child. Loud and piteous are his cries; To Venus quick ...

Discourses (Books 1 and 2)

... light' to be false,” how would it have affected the proposition? Who is ... books of the Stoics are full of them. What then is the one thing wanting? We want the ... word “master” he is fluttered and confounded in a moment. It is shameful ...

The Harvard Classics Anthology: 51 Volumes of Nonfiction Books + 20 Volumes of the Greatest Works of Fiction

Johann Wolfgang von GoetheGotthold Ephraim LessingBjørnstjerne BjørnsonThomas CarlyleTheodor StormCharles DickensPlatoTheodor FontaneRené DescartesGottfried KellerMark TwainImmanuel KantCharles DarwinMartin LutherRobert Louis StevensonWilliam ShakespeareDante AlighieriEuripidesPercy Bysshe ShelleyCharles LambHenry David ThoreauHenry JamesSamuel JohnsonJohn Stuart MillVictor HugoJoseph AddisonJane AustenJohn LockeJohn FletcherFrancis BeaumontLeigh HuntEpictetusAlphonse DaudetThomas De QuinceyGuy de MaupassantGeorge EliotWalter ScottLaurence SterneSamuel Taylor ColeridgeJonathan SwiftChristopher MarloweJacob GrimmWilhelm GrimmWilliam HazlittMarcus Tullius CiceroDaniel DefoeAesopRichard Henry DanaHenry FieldingJohn DrydenPhilip MassingerPedro Calderón de la BarcaBret HarteGeorge SandJohn RuskinOliver Wendell HolmesErnest RenanRobert BurnsDavid GarrickRalph Waldo EmersonJohn WebsterWashington IrvingIzaak WaltonJohn BunyanJuan ValeraAlfred de MussetJames Russell LowellCharles Augustin Sainte-BeuveNathaniel HawthorneHomerEdmund BurkePlutarchMolièreAeschylusMichael FaradaySophoclesWilliam Makepeace ThackerayBenjamin FranklinEdward Everett HalePierre CorneilleJean RacineVoltaireRobert BrowningOliver GoldsmithThomas DekkerJohn MiltonAristophanesBlaise PascalVirgilRichard Brinsley SheridanSimon NewcombWilliam PennWalter BiggesPhilip SidneyHerodotusWalter RaleighFrancis BaconGiuseppe MazziniFrancis PrettyGeorge BerkeleyThomas HobbesAdam SmithAlessandro ManzoniAbraham CowleyMichel de MontaigneBen JonsonJohn WoolmanBenvenuto CelliniSydney SmithJean FroissartWilliam Henry HarrisonWilliam HarveyMarcus AureliusHans Christian AndersenThomas MaloryGeorge Gordon ByronThomas à KempisIvan TurgenevRichard SteeleThomas BrowneArchibald GeikieThomas Babington MacaulayLeo TolstoyFyodor DostoevskyTacitusWilliam RoperHippocratesMiguel de CervantesThomas MoreFriedrich von SchillerPhilip NicholsLouis PasteurJoseph ListerJean Jacques RousseauPliny the YoungerCharles W. EliotEdgar Alan PoeSaint AugustineHermann Ludwig Ferdinand von HelmholtzFrancis DrakeEdward HaiesNiccolo MachiavelliAmbroise ParéWilliam A. NeilsonHonoré BalzacAlexander L. Kielland
... Egmont is discovered sleeping on a couch. A rustling of keys is heard; the ... imagination and belief. Silva (takes the sentence from an attendant, unfolds ... Egmont. Can the king transfer that authority? Silva. "We declare, after a ...

The Complete Harvard Classics - ALL 71 Volumes: The Five Foot Shelf & The Shelf of Fiction: The Famous Anthology of the Greatest Works of World Literature

Johann Wolfgang von GoetheGotthold Ephraim LessingBjørnstjerne BjørnsonThomas CarlyleTheodor StormCharles DickensPlatoTheodor FontaneRené DescartesGottfried KellerMark TwainImmanuel KantCharles DarwinMartin LutherRobert Louis StevensonWilliam ShakespeareDante AlighieriEuripidesPercy Bysshe ShelleyCharles LambHenry David ThoreauHenry JamesSamuel JohnsonJohn Stuart MillVictor HugoJoseph AddisonJane AustenJohn LockeJohn FletcherFrancis BeaumontLeigh HuntEpictetusAlphonse DaudetThomas De QuinceyGuy de MaupassantGeorge EliotWalter ScottLaurence SterneSamuel Taylor ColeridgeJonathan SwiftChristopher MarloweJacob GrimmWilhelm GrimmWilliam HazlittMarcus Tullius CiceroDaniel DefoeAesopRichard Henry DanaHenry FieldingJohn DrydenPhilip MassingerPedro Calderón de la BarcaBret HarteGeorge SandJohn RuskinOliver Wendell HolmesErnest RenanRobert BurnsDavid GarrickRalph Waldo EmersonJohn WebsterWashington IrvingIzaak WaltonJohn BunyanJuan ValeraAlfred de MussetJames Russell LowellCharles Augustin Sainte-BeuveNathaniel HawthorneHomerEdmund BurkePlutarchMolièreAeschylusMichael FaradaySophoclesWilliam Makepeace ThackerayBenjamin FranklinEdward Everett HalePierre CorneilleJean RacineVoltaireRobert BrowningOliver GoldsmithThomas DekkerJohn MiltonAristophanesBlaise PascalVirgilRichard Brinsley SheridanSimon NewcombWilliam PennWalter BiggesPhilip SidneyHerodotusWalter RaleighFrancis BaconGiuseppe MazziniFrancis PrettyGeorge BerkeleyThomas HobbesAdam SmithAlessandro ManzoniAbraham CowleyMichel de MontaigneBen JonsonJohn WoolmanBenvenuto CelliniSydney SmithJean FroissartWilliam Henry HarrisonWilliam HarveyMarcus AureliusHans Christian AndersenThomas MaloryGeorge Gordon ByronThomas à KempisIvan TurgenevRichard SteeleThomas BrowneArchibald GeikieThomas Babington MacaulayLeo TolstoyFyodor DostoevskyTacitusWilliam RoperHippocratesMiguel de CervantesThomas MoreFriedrich von SchillerPhilip NicholsLouis PasteurJoseph ListerJean Jacques RousseauPliny the YoungerCharles W. EliotEdgar Alan PoeSaint AugustineHermann Ludwig Ferdinand von HelmholtzFrancis DrakeEdward HaiesNiccolo MachiavelliAmbroise ParéWilliam A. NeilsonHonoré BalzacAlexander L. Kielland
... Egmont is discovered sleeping on a couch. A rustling of keys is heard; the ... imagination and belief. Silva (takes the sentence from an attendant, unfolds ... Egmont. Can the king transfer that authority? Silva. "We declare, after a ...

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