Seed-grain for Thought and Discussion, Bind 2Ticknor and Fields, 1856 |
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Side 7
... Infinite toil would not enable you to sweep away a mist ; but by ascending a little , you may often look over it altogether . So it is with our moral improvement ; we wrestle fiercely with a vicious habit , which would have no hold upon ...
... Infinite toil would not enable you to sweep away a mist ; but by ascending a little , you may often look over it altogether . So it is with our moral improvement ; we wrestle fiercely with a vicious habit , which would have no hold upon ...
Side 32
... Infinite ; wherein we feel Self to be swallowed up . All the generous side of human nature is nurtured and expanded by the contemplation of the Infinite . Hence is it that a sense of the Sublime and Beautiful , though it be not yet ...
... Infinite ; wherein we feel Self to be swallowed up . All the generous side of human nature is nurtured and expanded by the contemplation of the Infinite . Hence is it that a sense of the Sublime and Beautiful , though it be not yet ...
Side 41
... infinite love of virtue , and an entire trust in our power of following her , and we are so filled by this that we are but slightly shocked , when in any one instance we deviate from our well - known line of rectitude . Emerson . Say ...
... infinite love of virtue , and an entire trust in our power of following her , and we are so filled by this that we are but slightly shocked , when in any one instance we deviate from our well - known line of rectitude . Emerson . Say ...
Side 42
... Infinite Justice it is " equally impossible to save all , or to reject all ; and justice forbids us alike to count one fault or one ill deed as nothing , and to let it obscure the whole man . " " When you fancy any one has transgressed ...
... Infinite Justice it is " equally impossible to save all , or to reject all ; and justice forbids us alike to count one fault or one ill deed as nothing , and to let it obscure the whole man . " " When you fancy any one has transgressed ...
Side 57
... infinite care and completion ; and so what degrees of beauty exist among them can in no way be dependent upon this source , inasmuch as there are be- tween them no degrees of care . • · But the least appearance of violence or ...
... infinite care and completion ; and so what degrees of beauty exist among them can in no way be dependent upon this source , inasmuch as there are be- tween them no degrees of care . • · But the least appearance of violence or ...
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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