The Buried IdealSherman, French & Company, 1914 - 183 sider |
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Side 8
... soul do we find here . But another place and speech supply both lacks ; in whose words the shapes are flesh and the spirit breathes discernible therethrough . To these the reader shall in time be brought . First , then , we find our ...
... soul do we find here . But another place and speech supply both lacks ; in whose words the shapes are flesh and the spirit breathes discernible therethrough . To these the reader shall in time be brought . First , then , we find our ...
Side 15
... own dear lord . His soul melted not away , nor did the sword left of his kinsman weaken in the fight ; this the dragon found out when they met together . " 66 First , however , says our poet , he THE COMPANIONSHIP 15.
... own dear lord . His soul melted not away , nor did the sword left of his kinsman weaken in the fight ; this the dragon found out when they met together . " 66 First , however , says our poet , he THE COMPANIONSHIP 15.
Side 16
... soul was sorrowful ; he said to his com- rades : I mind me of the time we drank the mead , how we vowed then to our lord in mead - hall , unto him who gave these rings to us , that we would repay him for our battle trappings , for those ...
... soul was sorrowful ; he said to his com- rades : I mind me of the time we drank the mead , how we vowed then to our lord in mead - hall , unto him who gave these rings to us , that we would repay him for our battle trappings , for those ...
Side 17
... soul departs , leaving only his earlship to be praised , " as was meet in those times , that a man should foster a lord's fame and hold him in heart when he must forth from the body to become as a thing of nought . " We , however , have ...
... soul departs , leaving only his earlship to be praised , " as was meet in those times , that a man should foster a lord's fame and hold him in heart when he must forth from the body to become as a thing of nought . " We , however , have ...
Side 27
... soul , underlying all real spiritual progress whatsoever . Such a progress our ancient princelings must often have exemplified . Their long beneficence and its close personal relations could not fail , ex- cept perhaps in utterly ...
... soul , underlying all real spiritual progress whatsoever . Such a progress our ancient princelings must often have exemplified . Their long beneficence and its close personal relations could not fail , ex- cept perhaps in utterly ...
Andre udgaver - Se alle
Almindelige termer og sætninger
activities ancient Anglo-Saxon appeal bard beautiful begin Beowulf better bond brotherhood chance chief chiefly Christianity command common Companions Companionship course Cynewulf Danish debt delight Democracy devo devotion diversion doubtless eral fact faith fear feeling Feudal System Feudalism friends generosity gift give good-nature grateful love gratitude Grendel happiness Heardred heart Heaven heavenly Heliand Hell hope Hrothgar human Hygelac ical idea of Duty ideal immoralist impersonal joyful keep kind king lack less ligion living look lord makeshift mankind matter means ment modern natural Nietzsche Nietzschean old English once opportunity overlord patriotism perhaps petrifaction philosophers possible practice praise present prince principles Public Opinion pure reader righteousness sake Saxon seems serfdom social social gospels society sort soul spect spirit strength Tacitus templed hills thane things tion truly virtue warrior Wiglaf word
Populære passager
Side 151 - AND NO ONE SHALL WORK FOR MONEY, AND NO ONE SHALL WORK FOR FAME; BUT EACH FOR THE JOY OF THE WORKING AND EACH IN HIS SEPARATE STAR SHALL DRAW THE THING AS HE SEES IT FOR THE GOD OF THINGS AS THEY ARE.
Side 52 - Hear, my lord," swore the vassal as kneeling bareheaded and without arms he placed his hands within those of his superior, "I become liege man of yours for life and limb and earthly regard; and I will keep faith and loyalty to you for life and death, God help me!
Side 102 - If a man love not his brother whom he hath seen how shall he love God whom he hath not seen ? There was a catch in that like a riddle.
Side 41 - There is angels' song; the bliss of the happy; there is the gracious presence of the Lord, brighter than the sun, for all the blessed ones; there is the love of the beloved; life without death's end; a gladsome host of men; youth without age; the glory of the heavenly chivalry; health without pain for righteous workers; and for souls sublime rest without toil; there is day without dark gloom, ever gloriously bright; bliss without bale; friendship 'twixt friends for ever without feud; peace without...
Side 57 - Or ounce, or tiger, hog, or bearded goat, All other parts remaining as they were ; And they, so perfect is their misery, Not once perceive their foul disfigurement, But boast themselves more comely than before ; And all their friends and native home forget, To roll with pleasure in a sensual sty.
Side 61 - Then took they those whom they supposed to have any goods, both by night and by day, labouring men and women, and threw them into prison for their gold and silver, and inflicted on them unutterable tortures; for never were any martyrs so tortured as they were. Some they hanged up by the feet, and smoked them with foul smoke; and some by the thumbs, or by the head, and hung coats of mail on their feet.
Side 180 - What is done out of love always takes place beyond good and evil," Dostoevsky had written, "There is no good and bad.
Side 30 - Here, perhaps, is the key to Germanic success and the secret of Germanic supremacy. In war, indeed, of whatever kind the Germanic virtue of courage came to the front ; but in the comitatus courage was no more prominent than fidelity, loyalty, and truth. The sense of duty, the sense of standing and enduring for a principle, has 1 Who was this prince?
Side 41 - ... day without dark gloom, ever gloriously bright ; bliss without bale ; friendship ' twixt friends for ever without feud ; peace without enmity for the blest in heaven, in the communion of saints. Hunger is not there nor thirst, sleep, nor grievous sickness ; nor sun's heat, nor cold, nor care ; but there that blissful band, the fairest of all hosts, shall aye enjoy their Sovran's grace, and glory with their King.
Side 47 - Yea, thou didst shamefully pollute with guilt that body which I ransomed for Myself from the grasp of foes, and then forbade it sin. Why hast thou hanged Me worse on thy hands' cross than when of old I hung?