| Charles Butler - 1811 - 262 páginas
...loud voice. I say nothing of my dispositions in your regard : they are always the same. If the abbe de Langeron is at Cambray, say to him a little kind...duties proper for one's state ; a great prince is not t« serve God in the same manner as a hermit, or an obscure individual. I must tell you the truth ;... | |
| 1812 - 576 páginas
...plan of education had produced the faults which naturally spring from it. ' Religion, ' he writes to him, ' does not consist in a scrupulous observance...for ' one's state : a great prince is not to serve Gcd as a hermit, or ' even as an obscure individual. I must tell you the truth: — the * public esteems... | |
| François de Salignac de La Mothe- Fénelon - 1829 - 316 páginas
...in each individual the performance of the duties that belong to his condition. A great prince ought not to serve God in the same manner as a hermit, or a private individual. Feeling as affectionate an interest in the happiness of the whole human race... | |
| François de Salignac de La Mothe- Fénelon - 1829 - 316 páginas
...in each individual the performance of the duties that belong to his condition. A great prince ought not to serve God in the same manner as a hermit, or a private individual. Feeling as affectionate an interest in the happiness of the whole human race... | |
| François de Salignac de La Mothe- Fénelon - 1831 - 314 páginas
...in each individual the performance of the duties that belong to his condition. A great prince ought not to serve God in the same manner as a hermit, or a private individual. Feeling as affectionate an interest in the happiness of the whole human race... | |
| François de Salignac de La Mothe- Fénelon - 1864 - 386 páginas
...in each individual the performance of the duties that belong to his condition. A great prince ought not to serve God in the same manner as a hermit, or a private individual. ADVICE. Feeling as affectionate an interest in the happiness of the whole human... | |
| 1814 - 1018 páginas
...little punctilios ; it consists in the exercise of the virtues proper to each man's state and vocation. A great prince is not to serve God in the same manner as-a hermit, or a private man. St. Louis purBued the true interest of his nation, of which he was the... | |
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