Pearls of ThoughtHoughton, Mifflin, 1882 - 284 sider |
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... , " " BIOGRAPHY OF HOSEA BALLOU , " ETC. , ETC. Infinite riches in a little room.- MARLOWE . BOSTON : HOUGHTON , MIFFLIN AND COMPANY . The Riverside Press , Cambridge . 1882 . Liz 20557/1882 June Gift of 12 The Author , of.
... , " " BIOGRAPHY OF HOSEA BALLOU , " ETC. , ETC. Infinite riches in a little room.- MARLOWE . BOSTON : HOUGHTON , MIFFLIN AND COMPANY . The Riverside Press , Cambridge . 1882 . Liz 20557/1882 June Gift of 12 The Author , of.
Side 9
... riches to a nation but the only riches she can call her own . — -Johnson . Let the farmer for evermore be honored in his call- ing , for they who labor in the earth are the chosen people of God . Thomas Jefferson . - Allegory ...
... riches to a nation but the only riches she can call her own . — -Johnson . Let the farmer for evermore be honored in his call- ing , for they who labor in the earth are the chosen people of God . Thomas Jefferson . - Allegory ...
Side 14
... rich in pos- sibility . We live up to our expectations , not to our possessions , and make a figure proportionable to what we may be , not what we are . We outrun our pres- ent income , as not doubting to disburse ourselves out of the ...
... rich in pos- sibility . We live up to our expectations , not to our possessions , and make a figure proportionable to what we may be , not what we are . We outrun our pres- ent income , as not doubting to disburse ourselves out of the ...
Side 30
... riches , and all the other things called goods , operate equally as evils to the vicious and unjust as they do as benefits to the just . - Plato . How blessings brighten as they take their flight ! -Young . Reflect upon your present ...
... riches , and all the other things called goods , operate equally as evils to the vicious and unjust as they do as benefits to the just . - Plato . How blessings brighten as they take their flight ! -Young . Reflect upon your present ...
Side 62
... riches . — Seneca . Where necessity ends , curiosity begins ; and no sooner are we supplied with everything that nature can demand , than we sit down to contrive artificial appetites . Johnson . The thirst of desire is never filled ...
... riches . — Seneca . Where necessity ends , curiosity begins ; and no sooner are we supplied with everything that nature can demand , than we sit down to contrive artificial appetites . Johnson . The thirst of desire is never filled ...
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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