The Chief End of ManHoughton, Mifflin, 1897 - 296 sider |
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Side 24
... elements ; the Puritan temper is at its best heroic and austere , made despotic by its confidence of divine authority , and by its supernaturalism made indifferent to the new science and to the various elements of human nature on which ...
... elements ; the Puritan temper is at its best heroic and austere , made despotic by its confidence of divine authority , and by its supernaturalism made indifferent to the new science and to the various elements of human nature on which ...
Side 25
... element of be- neficence . He exhorts men to return to nature , but it is a somewhat unreal nature , a dream of primeval innocence and simplicity . He idealizes the family relation , and brings wisdom and gen- tleness to the training of ...
... element of be- neficence . He exhorts men to return to nature , but it is a somewhat unreal nature , a dream of primeval innocence and simplicity . He idealizes the family relation , and brings wisdom and gen- tleness to the training of ...
Side 39
... elements of character , to the homely , every - day aspect , to the life not only of the cultivated few but of the mass of humanity , the new perception has been reached , that Work is the basis of all personal and social virtue . Toil ...
... elements of character , to the homely , every - day aspect , to the life not only of the cultivated few but of the mass of humanity , the new perception has been reached , that Work is the basis of all personal and social virtue . Toil ...
Side 54
... elements as two steeds yoked together , the one black , unruly , down - plung- ing , the other white , celestial , up - mounting , while Reason , the charioteer , strives to rule them . The nobler interpretation is slowly acquired by ...
... elements as two steeds yoked together , the one black , unruly , down - plung- ing , the other white , celestial , up - mounting , while Reason , the charioteer , strives to rule them . The nobler interpretation is slowly acquired by ...
Side 79
... elements , by the imposition of a rule which was often narrow and harsh , but which was firm , stable , and the foundation for fairer and freer growths . Already in Lucretius , and now again in Epic- tetus , we have passed from the ...
... elements , by the imposition of a rule which was often narrow and harsh , but which was firm , stable , and the foundation for fairer and freer growths . Already in Lucretius , and now again in Epic- tetus , we have passed from the ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
aspiration beauty belief blended book of Daniel book of Psalms celestial centuries character chastity child Christ Christianity church comes courage creed death Deity divine divine grace dogma earth elements Emerson emotion Epictetus ethical evil experience faith father feeling fidelity finds forces George Eliot give glad gospel happiness heart heaven Hebrew hell heroic higher highest holy hope human idea ideal Iliad imagination immortality inspired intellectual Jesus Jewish Judaism knowledge living Lord Lucretius man's mankind ment mind moral nature ness noble Old Testament passion Paul peace perfect philosophy Plato present prophets Protestantism Psalms pure Puritan purity reality religion religious reverence rience seems sense Shakspere social society Socrates sometimes sorrow soul spiritual Stoic Stoicism story struggle sublime supernatural supreme tender thee things thou thought tion touch true truth universe victory virtue vision voice whole woman word worship Xenophon