Pearls of ThoughtHoughton, Mifflin, 1881 - 284 sider |
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Side 20
... always unsatisfactory in its course , always mis- erable in its end . - Theodore Parker . But In hope to merit heaven by making earth a hell . - Byron . Three forms of asceticism have existed in this weak world ART ASC 20.
... always unsatisfactory in its course , always mis- erable in its end . - Theodore Parker . But In hope to merit heaven by making earth a hell . - Byron . Three forms of asceticism have existed in this weak world ART ASC 20.
Side 38
... - ville . Faith and hope themselves shall die , while death- less charity remains . — Prior . The place of charity , like that of God , is every- where . Professor Vinet . - " People do not care to give alms without some CHA CHA 38.
... - ville . Faith and hope themselves shall die , while death- less charity remains . — Prior . The place of charity , like that of God , is every- where . Professor Vinet . - " People do not care to give alms without some CHA CHA 38.
Side 46
... hope of a fool than of him . — Bible . Nature has sometimes made a fool , but a coxcomb is always of a man's own making . — Addison . Everything without tells the individual that he is nothing ; everything within persuades him that he ...
... hope of a fool than of him . — Bible . Nature has sometimes made a fool , but a coxcomb is always of a man's own making . — Addison . Everything without tells the individual that he is nothing ; everything within persuades him that he ...
Side 52
... hope for the rest . De Finod . When credulity comes from the heart it does no harm to the intellect . — Joubert . What believer sees a disturbing omission or infe- licity ? The text , whether of prophet or of poet , ex- pands for ...
... hope for the rest . De Finod . When credulity comes from the heart it does no harm to the intellect . — Joubert . What believer sees a disturbing omission or infe- licity ? The text , whether of prophet or of poet , ex- pands for ...
Side 62
... d have married again , and been glad to be quit of Romeo . Charles Buxton . What we call our despair is often only the painful eagerness of unfed hope . - George Eliot . Despotism . — It is difficult for power to avoid DES DES 62.
... d have married again , and been glad to be quit of Romeo . Charles Buxton . What we call our despair is often only the painful eagerness of unfed hope . - George Eliot . Despotism . — It is difficult for power to avoid DES DES 62.
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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 George Herbert George MacDonald 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 Richter ruin Ruskin Samuel Smiles sense Shake Shakespeare Smiles sorrow soul speare sweet Sydney Smith tears things Thoreau thou thought tion true truth vice virtue Voltaire wisdom wise woman words