Sunrise (Noon, Sunset) [quotations] by H.L.S. Lear, 第 245 号、第 2 部Henrietta Louisa Lear 1882 |
この書籍内から
検索結果1-2 / 2
16 ページ
... faults as a man who has the habit of detecting the faults of others . - F . W. FABER . VIII . WHAT more passing than words ? A breath ! What very very few words of ours rest with us . We forget them as soon as spoken . God does not ...
... faults as a man who has the habit of detecting the faults of others . - F . W. FABER . VIII . WHAT more passing than words ? A breath ! What very very few words of ours rest with us . We forget them as soon as spoken . God does not ...
81 ページ
... faults and vices ; and few , very few , are truly charitable to the fail- ings of others , except those who are severe to their own.- Guesses at Truth . LXXXIV . " TIS the unfamiliar that charms the fool ; whereas to the wise man the ...
... faults and vices ; and few , very few , are truly charitable to the fail- ings of others , except those who are severe to their own.- Guesses at Truth . LXXXIV . " TIS the unfamiliar that charms the fool ; whereas to the wise man the ...
他の版 - すべて表示
多く使われている語句
ARTHUR HELPS begins at home BOSSUET Caius cant charity Christian cloud comfort Dean of St door doubt dulness duty E. B. BROWNING earth earthly evil FABER Fancy feel forget Friends in Council give God's grace grow habit hath HAZLITT Essays hear heart Heaven HELPS Companions HELPS Friends Human Respect hypocrisy ignorance immortal souls indolence intellect it.-SIR J. H. NEWMAN Johnson JOSHUA REYNOLDS kindle knowledge labour Lectures on Art less LIDDON light and heat live Lord malice man's mercy moral multitude narrow neglect ness never Nicknames object ourselves Paul's perhaps political popery possessed Prejudice Presbyterian present PUSEY R. W. CHURCH religion religious round a centre RUSKIN Lectures seeks serene shadow SHAKESPEARE Sonnet LX shine sorrow speak highly spirit strength of mind suffering Sundial sure thing know Thou thought tion touch truth vice whole Windham wise words worthy of affection ΝΟΟΝ
人気のある引用
80 ページ - It is indisputably evident that a great part of every man's life must be employed in collecting materials for the exercise of genius. Invention, strictly speaking, is little more than a new combination of those images which have been previously gathered and deposited in the memory: nothing can be made of nothing: he who has laid up no materials, can produce no combination.
42 ページ - K^verence, for what is pure and bright in your own youth; for what is true and tried in the age of others ; for all that is gracious among the living, great among the dead, — and marvellous in the Powers that cannot die.
45 ページ - Uninterrupted sunshine would parch our hearts : we want shade and rain to cool and refresh them.
15 ページ - ... watch only for the smiles and neglect the frowns of fate, to compose our lives of bright and gentle moments, turning always to the sunny side of things, and letting the rest slip from our imaginations, unheeded or forgotten ! How different from the common art of self-tormenting ! For myself, as I rode along the Brenta, while the sun shone hot upon its sluggish, slimy waves, my sensations were far from comfortable ; but the reading this inscription on the side of a glaring wall in an instant restored...
75 ページ - ... we may be free from the impotencies of fear, envy, malice, covetousness, ambition; that we may be clear of these, considered as vices seated in the heart, considered as constituting a general wrong temper; from which general wrong frame of mind, all the mistaken pursuits, and far the greatest part of the unhappiness of life, proceed. He who should find out one rule to assist us in this work, would deserve infinitely better of mankind than all the improvers of other knowledge put together.
14 ページ - Horas non numero nisi serenas — is the motto of a sun-dial near Venice. There is a softness and a harmony in the words and in the thought unparalleled. Of all conceits it is surely the most classical. " I count only the hours that are serene.
25 ページ - Tis the good reader that makes the good book ; a good head cannot read amiss, in every book he finds passages which seem confidences or asides hidden from all else and unmistakably meant for his ear.
39 ページ - We may recollect when children, perhaps, once seeing a person, and it is almost like a dream to us now that we did. It seems like an accident which goes and is all over, like some creature of the moment, which has no existence beyond it. The rain falls, and the wind blows ; and showers and storms have no existence beyond the time when we felt them ; they are nothing in themselves. But if we have but once seen any child of Adam, we have seen an immortal soul.