Memorials: And Other Papers, Bind 1Ticknor & Fields, 1856 |
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Side ix
... minds as ultimate appeals to what is most divine in man . Happy it is for human welfare that the blind heart of man is a thousand times wiser than his understanding . An arrière pensée should lie hidden in all minds . -a holy reserve as ...
... minds as ultimate appeals to what is most divine in man . Happy it is for human welfare that the blind heart of man is a thousand times wiser than his understanding . An arrière pensée should lie hidden in all minds . -a holy reserve as ...
Side 30
... mind around such a topic , as though too ostentatiously levelled to his particular knowledge , or to his animal condition of * If mere names were allowed to dazzle , the judgment , how mag- nificent to a gallant young Englishman of ...
... mind around such a topic , as though too ostentatiously levelled to his particular knowledge , or to his animal condition of * If mere names were allowed to dazzle , the judgment , how mag- nificent to a gallant young Englishman of ...
Side 41
... Laxton to warrant me in presuming some curiosity or interest to have gathered within his mind about the mistress of the mansion . Who was Lady Car- VOL . I. 4 bery ? what was her present position , and what VISIT TO LAXTON . 41.
... Laxton to warrant me in presuming some curiosity or interest to have gathered within his mind about the mistress of the mansion . Who was Lady Car- VOL . I. 4 bery ? what was her present position , and what VISIT TO LAXTON . 41.
Side 50
... mind was masculine , and in some directions aspiring , should so readily have acquiesced in a result which she might have anticipated from the beginning . Happy was the childhood , happy the early dawn of womanhood , which these two ...
... mind was masculine , and in some directions aspiring , should so readily have acquiesced in a result which she might have anticipated from the beginning . Happy was the childhood , happy the early dawn of womanhood , which these two ...
Side 72
... minds is , that , doubtless , the moral instruction was bad , as being heathen ; but that still it was as good as heathen opportunities allowed it to be . No mistake can be greater . Moral instruction had no existence even in the plan ...
... minds is , that , doubtless , the moral instruction was bad , as being heathen ; but that still it was as good as heathen opportunities allowed it to be . No mistake can be greater . Moral instruction had no existence even in the plan ...
Almindelige termer og sætninger
advantages allowed already amongst ancient answer applied argument authority believe called carried cause century character Christian circumstances common connected direction distinction effect England English equally error existence expression fact fathers feeling final five followed force four give Greece Greek ground hand happened honor hope horses human hundred instance interest knowledge known Lady Carbery least less living looked Lord means mind mode mother namely naturally never notice object once Oracle original Oxford Pacha Pagan particular passed perhaps period possible present question rank reader reason regard religion respect result seemed sense separate Serasker shillings simply society speak spirit Suliotes supposed things thought thousand tion town true truth Turks vast whilst whole young
Populære passager
Side 78 - Stood on my feet: about me round I saw Hill, dale, and shady woods, and sunny plains, And liquid lapse of murmuring streams; by these Creatures that lived and moved, and walked or flew; Birds on the branches warbling; ~a.ll things smiled; With fragrance and with joy my heart o'erflowed. Myself I then perused, and limb by limb Surveyed, and sometimes went, and sometimes ran With supple joints, as lively vigour led...
Side 84 - I surrendered myself for two hours daily to the lessons in horsemanship of a principal groom who ranked as a first-rate rough-rider ; and I gathered manifold experiences amongst the horses — so different from the wild, hard-mouthed horses at Westport, that were often vicious, and sometimes trained to vice. Here, though spirited, the horses were pretty generally gentle, and all had been regularly broke. My education was not entirely neglected even as regarded sportsmanship ; that great branch of...
Side 78 - With supple joints, as lively vigor led : But who I was, or where, or from what cause, Knew not; to speak I tried, and forthwith spake; My tongue obey'd, and readily could name Whate'er I saw.
Side 239 - Hence it is, that, like the professional rhetoricians of Athens, not seldom the Christian fathers, when urgently pressed by an antagonist equally mendacious and ignorant, could not resist the human instinct for employing arguments such as would baffle and confound the unprincipled opponent, rather than such as would satisfy the mature Christian. If a man denied himself all specious arguments, and all artifices of dialectic subtlety, he must renounce the hopes of a present triumph; for the light of...
Side 205 - In short, up to 1820, the name of Wordsworth was trampled under foot; from 1820 to 1830, it was militant; from 1830 to 1835, it has been triumphant.
Side 82 - Never in any equal number of months had my understanding so much expanded as during this visit to Laxton. The incessant demand made upon me by Lady Carbery for solutions of the many difficulties besetting the study of divinity and the Greek Testament, or for such approximations to solutions as my resources would furnish, forced me into a preternatural tension of all the faculties applicable to that purpose.
Side 197 - THERE was one reason why I sought solitude at that early age, and sought it in a morbid excess, which must naturally have conferred upon my character some degree of that interest which belongs to all extremes. My eye had been couched into a secondary power of vision, by misery, by solitude, by sympathy with life in all its modes, by experience too early won, and by the sense of danger critically escaped. Suppose the case of a man suspended by some colossal arm over an unfathomed abyss, — suspended,...
Side 211 - This fancy, often patronized by other writers, and even acted upon, resembles that restraint which some metrical writers have imposed upon themselves — of writing a long copy of verses from which some particular letter, or from each line of which some different letter, should be carefully excluded.
Side 21 - ... to slumber till his death, that, at moments when he believed himself unobserved, he still wore the aspect of an impassioned lover. "He beheld A vision, and adored the thing he saw. Arabian fiction never filled the world With half the wonders that were wrought for him. Earth breathed in one great presence of the spring Her chamber window did surpass in glory The portals of the dawn.