Part, Dialogue
1 1, Pre| two years ago, for my own pleasure, in leisure hours, I had
2 1, Int| soil. From early youth his pleasure was to pass the night out
3 1, Int| not by his own will and pleasure, he would be compelled to
4 1, 1 | to him who loves it is a pleasure to love; and he who really
5 1, 1 | heart, and which might give pleasure to the mind; the soul --
6 1, 2 | in things, can afford no pleasure without some bitterness;
7 1, 2 | through fatigue that we find pleasure in repose; separation is
8 1, 2 | separation is the cause of our pleasure in union and, examining
9 1, 2 | temperate in desires; to him pleasure is not pleasure, having
10 1, 2 | to him pleasure is not pleasure, having ever present the
11 1, 3 | other sense than that of pleasure; but he is moved by a most
12 1, 5 | spirit, and to soul,~No pleasure is, no liberty, no life,~
13 1, 5 | than under whatsoever other pleasure which may offer itself to
14 1, 5 | that being fixed in one pleasure, there is no displeasure
15 1, 5 | entirely annulled by the pleasure of our own inventions and
16 1, 5 | that he no longer felt more pleasure than sorrow in eating, drinking,
17 1, 5 | pain in the desire than~pleasure in the realization. And
18 2, 1 | that one is wasted with the pleasure of that which destroys him,
19 2, 1 | opposites, and there is no pleasure of generation on one side
20 2, 1 | which ./. Should cease from pleasure for a space,~Can ever from
21 2, 1 | philosopher, by means of pleasure, vices are more easily engendered.
22 2, 3 | loses enjoyment, has no pleasure before the enjoyment, nor
23 2, 4 | to its own good will and pleasure it makes itself to be found.
24 2, 5 | And every torment be as pleasure held,~Who, hoping to behold~
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