Seed-grain for Thought and Discussion, Bind 2Ticknor and Fields, 1856 |
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Resultater 1-5 af 18
Side 12
... fancy of mine , but I cannot help wishing we could move for returns , as their phrase is in parlia- ment , for the suffering caused in any one day , or other period of time , throughout the world , to be arranged under certain heads ...
... fancy of mine , but I cannot help wishing we could move for returns , as their phrase is in parlia- ment , for the suffering caused in any one day , or other period of time , throughout the world , to be arranged under certain heads ...
Side 14
... fancy for , where would be the harm ? " To which I reply that it is not the mode in which this restlessness of nature acts that is of so much importance as the thing itself . The disease itself is the dreadful thing , and that which is ...
... fancy for , where would be the harm ? " To which I reply that it is not the mode in which this restlessness of nature acts that is of so much importance as the thing itself . The disease itself is the dreadful thing , and that which is ...
Side 30
... fancy that we would substitute for a reality , is , if we saw aright , and saw the whole , not only false , but every way less beautiful and excellent than that which we sacrifice to it . Sterling . Things are sullen and will be as they ...
... fancy that we would substitute for a reality , is , if we saw aright , and saw the whole , not only false , but every way less beautiful and excellent than that which we sacrifice to it . Sterling . Things are sullen and will be as they ...
Side 34
... fancy . And yet hard by them are groans , and horrors , and sufferings of all kinds , which seem to penetrate no deeper than their senses . • Is there no one service for the great family of man which has yet interested you ? Is no work ...
... fancy . And yet hard by them are groans , and horrors , and sufferings of all kinds , which seem to penetrate no deeper than their senses . • Is there no one service for the great family of man which has yet interested you ? Is no work ...
Side 38
... - ate to their demerits , those who offend us by pretension of any kind . We are apt to fancy that they despise us ; whereas , all the while , perhaps , they are only courting ON OUR JUDGMENTS OF OTHER MEN . 39 our admiration.
... - ate to their demerits , those who offend us by pretension of any kind . We are apt to fancy that they despise us ; whereas , all the while , perhaps , they are only courting ON OUR JUDGMENTS OF OTHER MEN . 39 our admiration.
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
action affection Antoninus ART OF LIVING beauty become benevolence better body Carlyle character charity Choler circumstances conversation dangerous delight desire divine duties Emerson enjoyment eternal evil eyes F. W. Newman faculties faith fancy faults fear feeling FINE MANNERS friendship gifts give God's Goethe grace Guesses at Truth habit happiness Hartley Coleridge hath heart heaven Henry Taylor Heraclitus honor human imagination imperfection infinite intellectual Isaac Taylor Jeremy Taylor judgment kind labor less look man's manner marriage means ment mind moral nature never noble Novalis Oakfield ourselves pain passion patience perfect persons Philothea pleasure poor Poverty present reason relations religion Ruskin sense Sidney Smith Sir Thomas Browne society soul speak spirit sweet taste temptation thee Theologia Germanica things thou art thought thyself tion toil trifles true understanding virtue whole wisdom wise words