Pearls of ThoughtHoughton, Mifflin, 1882 - 284 sider |
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Side 6
... Affection . - None of the affections have been noted to fascinate and bewitch , but love and envy . Bacon . None are so desolate but something dear , dearer than self , possesses or possess'd . — Byron . Those childlike caresses which ...
... Affection . - None of the affections have been noted to fascinate and bewitch , but love and envy . Bacon . None are so desolate but something dear , dearer than self , possesses or possess'd . — Byron . Those childlike caresses which ...
Side 24
... , and can't he managed by anybody , at once finds her master in a baby . Her sister's child will strike the rock and set all her affections flowing . - Charles Buxton . - Bargain . What is the disposition which makes men rejoice AUT BAB 24.
... , and can't he managed by anybody , at once finds her master in a baby . Her sister's child will strike the rock and set all her affections flowing . - Charles Buxton . - Bargain . What is the disposition which makes men rejoice AUT BAB 24.
Side 55
... affection . It is the intensest rendering of vulgar- ity , absolute and utter . Ruskin . - Curiosity . - A person who is too nice an ob- server of the business of the crowd , like one who is too curious in observing the labor of the ...
... affection . It is the intensest rendering of vulgar- ity , absolute and utter . Ruskin . - Curiosity . - A person who is too nice an ob- server of the business of the crowd , like one who is too curious in observing the labor of the ...
Side 92
... to their source , how beautiful would even death appear ! for how much charity , mercy , and purified affection would be seen to have their growth in dusty graves ! - Dickens . - - Forgiveness . It is more easy to forgive the FOR FOR 92.
... to their source , how beautiful would even death appear ! for how much charity , mercy , and purified affection would be seen to have their growth in dusty graves ! - Dickens . - - Forgiveness . It is more easy to forgive the FOR FOR 92.
Side 106
... affection of the mind : we never reflect on the man we love without exult- ing in our choice , while he who has bound us to him by benefits alone rises to our ideas as a person to whom we have in some measure forfeited our free- dom ...
... affection of the mind : we never reflect on the man we love without exult- ing in our choice , while he who has bound us to him by benefits alone rises to our ideas as a person to whom we have in some measure forfeited our free- dom ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
action Addison Alfred de Musset Arsène Houssaye Bacon beautiful Beecher better Bulwer-Lytton Burke Byron Carlyle Chapin Charles Buxton Coleridge Colton conscience death divine Douglas Jerrold Dryden earth Emerson everything evil eyes fear feel Feltham flowers fools fortune friends genius George Eliot give glory Goethe gold Goldsmith hand happiness hath heart heaven Heinrich Heine honor hope human Jeremy Collier Jeremy Taylor Johnson Joubert kind knowledge labor light live look Macaulay Madame Swetchine man's mankind Mazzini Milton mind Molière Montaigne moral nature ness never noble pain passions Petit Senn pleasure poet poetry Pope reason religion riches Richter ruin Ruskin Samuel Smiles sense Shake Shakespeare Smiles sorrow soul speare sweet Sydney Smith tears temper things Thoreau thou thought tion true truth vice Victor Hugo virtue Voltaire wisdom wise woman words