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  Item Reference: KCLCAL-1859-1860-426

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GENERAL LITERATURE AND SCIENCE 427 VIII -Cranslate into &tttc mit firoSt accentuated It is as easy to conceive that we may exist out of bodies as in them that we might have animated bodies of any other organs and senses wholly different from these now given us and that we may hereafter animate these same or new bodies variously modified and organized as to conceive how we can animate such bodies as our present And lastly the dissolution of all these several organized bodies supposing ourselves to have successively ani- mated them would have no more conceivable tendency to destroy the living beings ourselves or deprive us of living faculties the faculties of perception and of action than the dissolution of any foreign matter which we are capable of receiving impressions from and making use of for the common occasions of life Butler's Analogy FIRST AND SECOND DIVISIONS -J or attr Grammar Rtotorj &t 11 Quote any passages from Horace which speak of his tastes and habits his parentage education friends &c Translate Leporem sectatus equove Lassus ab indomito vel si Romana fatigat Militia assuetum graecari seu pila velox Molliter austerum studio fallente laborem Seu te discus agit pete cedentem aera disco Cum labor extuderit fastidia siccus inanis Sperne cibum vilem nisi Hymettia mella Falerno Ne biberis diluta Foris est promus et atrum Defendens pisces hiemat mare cum sale panis Latrantem stomachum bene leniet Unde putas aut Qui partum Non in caro nidore voluptas Summa sed in te ipso est Tu pulmentaria quaere
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