But the child is by no means the only object to which the self-regarding sentiment may be, and very commonly is, extended, especially in men in whom the sympathetic tendency and the gregarious instinct are strong. After the child the family as a whole,... The hall of Hellingsley 3 vols - 第 230 頁sir Samuel Egerton Brydges (bart.) 著 - 1821完整檢視 - 關於此書
| William Wells Brown - 1855 - 338 頁
...sentiments, enlarges the affections, kindles the imagination, and gives to us the enjoyment of a life in the past, and in the future, as well as in the present. Under its light and warmth, we wake from our torpidity and coldness, to a sense of our capabilities.... | |
| Robert Alfred Vaughan - 1858 - 402 頁
...sentiments, enlarges the affections, kindles the imagination, and gives to us the enjoyment of a life in the past, and in the future, as well as in the present. It cultivates those faculties within us, which the more we cultivate them, the more do we find meanness... | |
| Robert Alfred Vaughan - 1858 - 390 頁
...sentiments, enlarges the affections, kindles the imagination, and gives to us the enjoyment of a life in the past, and in the future, as well as in the present. It cultivates those faculties within us, which the more we cultivate them, the more do we find meanness... | |
| Robert Alfred Vaughan - 1864 - 326 頁
...sentiments, enlarges the affections, kindles the imagination, and gives to us the enjoyment of a life in the past, and in the future, as well as in the present. It cultivates those faculties within us, which the more we cultivate them, the more do we find meanness... | |
| Robert Vaughan - 1864 - 330 頁
...sentiments, enlarges the affections, kindles the imagination, and gives to us the enjoyment of a life in the past, and in the future, as well as in the present. It cultivates those faculties within us, which the more we cultivate them, the more do we find meanness... | |
| Matthew Brown - 1873 - 164 頁
...dear young friends, even now we are able to live three lives at one and the same time. We may live in the past and in the future as well as in the present. We can recall the past by our memories, and live it over afresh; and we can anticipate the future by... | |
| William McDougall - 1909 - 378 頁
...sympathetic tendency and the gregarious instinct are strong. After the child the family as a whole, both in the past and in the future as well as in the present, is the object to which this extension is most readily effected. A man realises, more especially perhaps... | |
| William McDougall - 1916 - 460 頁
...sympathetic tendency and the gregarious instinct are strong. After the child the family as a whole, both in the past and in the future as well as in the present, is the object to which this extension is most readily effected. A man realises, more especially perhaps... | |
| William McDougall - 1921 - 440 頁
...sympathetic tendency and the gregarious instinct are strong. After the child the family as a whole, both in the past and in the future as well as in the present, is the object to which this extension is most readily effected. A man realises, more especially perhaps... | |
| William McDougall - 1926 - 536 頁
...sympathetic tendency and the gregarious instinct are strong. After the child the family as a whole, both in the past and in the future as well as in the present, is the object to which this extension is most readily effected. A man realises, more especially perhaps... | |
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