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" Recollect every day the things you have seen, or heard, or read, which may have made any addition to your understanding: read the writings of God and men... "
Logick: Or, The Right Use of Reason in the Inquiry After Truth. With a ... - Page 76
by Isaac Watts - 1763 - 365 pages
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A Grammar of Logic and Intellectual Philosophy: On Didactic Principles ...

Alexander Jamieson - Logic - 1835 - 312 pages
...Any the things you have seen, or heard, or read, which may have made an addition to your knowledge : read the writings of God and men with diligence and perpetual reviews : be not fona of hastening to a new booTc, or a new chapter, till .you -, have well fixed and established in...
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A Grammar of Logic and Intellectual Philosophy: On Didactic Principles ...

Alexander Jamieson - Logic - 1837 - 312 pages
...day the things you have seen, or heard, or read, which may have made an addition to your knowledge : read the writings of God and men with diligence and perpetual reviews : be not fond of hastening to a new book, or a new chapter, till you have well fixed and established in your mind what...
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Hints on study, and the employment of time. By a late member of the ...

Hints - 1838 - 216 pages
...this be laid down as an axiom, that great improvement is a work of long time and great labour." KNOX. "Read the Writings of God and men with DILIGENCE, and perpetual reviews." WATTS. " Industry is the great condimentum, the seasoning of every pleasure, without which life is...
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A Compendium of English Literature: Chronologically Arranged, from Sir John ...

Charles Dexter Cleveland - English literature - 1856 - 800 pages
...the things you have seen, or heard, or read, which may have made any addition to your understanding: read the writings of God and men with diligence and perpetual reviews : be not fond of hastening to a new book, or a new chapter, till you have well fixed and established in your mind what...
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Elements of Logic: On the Basis of Lectures by William Barron ... With Large ...

James Robert Boyd - Logic - 1856 - 268 pages
...the things you have seen, or heard, or read, which muy have made any addition to your understanding : read the writings of God and men with diligence and perpetual reviews : be not fond of hastening to a new book, or a new chapter, till you have well fixed in your mind what was useful in...
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Elements of Logic: On the Basis of Lectures by William Barron ... With Large ...

James Robert Boyd - Logic - 1856 - 266 pages
...understanding: read the writings of God and men with diligence and perpetual reviews : be not fond of hastening to a new book, or a new chapter, till you have well fixed in your mind what was useful in the last. " (2.) Talk over the things which you have seen, heard, or...
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A Compendium of English Literature: Chronologically Arranged from Sir John ...

Charles Dexter Cleveland - American literature - 1848 - 786 pages
...the things you have seen, or heard, or read, which may have made any addition to your understanding : read the writings of God and men with diligence and perpetual reviews : be not fond of hastening to a new book, or a new chapter, till you have well fixed and established in your mind what...
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A Compendium of English Literautre: Chronologically Arranged, from Sir John ...

Charles Dexter Cleveland - 1863 - 788 pages
...the things you have seen, or heard, or read, which may have made any addition to your understanding: read the writings of God and men with diligence and perpetual reviews : be not fond of hastening to a new book, or a new chapter, till you have well fixed and established in your mind what...
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A Compendium of English Literature: Chronologically Arranged, from Sir John ...

Charles Dexter Cleveland - English literature - 1865 - 784 pages
...the things you have seen, or heard, or read, which may have made any addition to your understanding : read the writings of God and men with diligence and perpetual reviews : be not fond of hastening to a new book, or a new chapter, till you have well fixed and established in your mind what...
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A Compendium of English Literature: Chronologically Arranged, from Sir John ...

Charles Dexter Cleveland - English literature - 1872 - 786 pages
...tilings you have seen, or heard, o: read, which may have made any addition to your understanding • -ead the writings of God and men with diligence and perpetual reviews : be not fond of hastening to a new book, or a new chapter, till you have well fixed and established in your mind what...
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