First to Fitting
A Concordance to the Collected Essays of Ralph Waldo Emerson Compiled by Eugene F. Irey
first, adj. (627)
Nat 1.15 18 ...light is the first of painters.
Nat 1.16 13 First, the simple perception of natural
forms is a delight.
Nat 1.24 13 Thus in art does Nature work through the
will of a man filled
with the beauty of her first works.
Nat 1.29 14 ...as [idiomatic language] is the first
language, so is it the last.
Nat 1.35 5 Material objects...are necessarily kinds of
scoriae of the
substantial thoughts of the Creator, which must always preserve an
exact
relation to their first origin;...
Nat 1.38 25 The first steps in Agriculture...teach that
Nature's dice are
always loaded;...
Nat 1.38 26 The first steps in Agriculture, Astronomy,
Zoology (those first
steps which the farmer, the hunter, and the sailor take), teach that
Nature's
dice are always loaded;...
Nat 1.40 24 ...every change of vegetation from the
first principle of growth
in the eye of a leaf...shall hint or thunder to man the laws of right
and
wrong...
Nat 1.41 12 Nothing in nature is exhausted in its first
use.
Nat 1.41 21 The first and gross manifestation of this
truth [of the doctrine
of Use] is our inevitable and hated training in values and wants...
Nat 1.42 7 ...[a farm] is a sacred emblem from the
first furrow of spring to
the last stack which the snow of winter overtakes in the fields.
Nat 1.49 20 The first effort of thought tends to relax
this despotism of the
senses which binds us to nature as if we were a part of it...
Nat 1.50 12 Our first institution in the Ideal
philosophy is a hint from
Nature herself.
Nat 1.57 19 We apprehend the absolute. As it were, for
the first time, we
exist.
Nat 1.58 7 The first and last lesson of religion is,
The things that are seen, are temporal; the things that are unseen, are
eternal.
Nat 1.59 22 ...with culture this faith [that the
external world is appearance] will as surely arise on the mind as did
the first.
Nat 1.62 18 The first of these questions only [What is
matter?], the ideal
theory answers.
AmS 1.84 23 The first in time and the first in
importance of the influences
upon the mind is that of nature.
AmS 1.86 25 ...when he has learned...to see that the
natural philosophy that
now is, is only the first gropings of [the soul's] gigantic hand, [the
scholar] shall look forward to an ever expanding knowledge as to a
becoming
creator.
AmS 1.87 20 The scholar of the first age received into
him the world
around;...
AmS 1.103 17 The orator distrusts at first the fitness
of his frank
confessions...
AmS 1.115 25 A nation of men will for the first time
exist...
DSA 1.130 10 ...we become sensible of the first defect
of historical
Christianity.
DSA 1.134 3 The second defect of the traditionary and
limited way of using
the mind of Christ is a consequence of the first;...
DSA 1.135 17 The office [of priest] is the first in the
world.
DSA 1.145 18 Let me admonish you, first of all, to go
alone;...
DSA 1.146 7 ...acquaint men at first hand with Deity.
DSA 1.150 12 The remedy to [the old forms'] deformity
is first, soul, and
second, soul, and evermore, soul.
DSA 1.150 16 Two inestimable advantages Christianity
has given us; first
the Sabbath...
DSA 1.150 23 Let [the Sabbath] stand forevermore, a
temple which new
love, new faith, new sight shall restore to more than its first
splendor...
LE 1.167 10 Poetry has scarce chanted its first song.
LE 1.168 14 The man...who rambles in the woods, seems
to be the first
man that ever...entered a grove.
LE 1.171 23 ...the first observation you make...may
open a new view of
nature and of man...
LE 1.172 10 ...the first word [a man of genius] utters,
sets all your so-called
knowledge afloat and at large.
LE 1.185 15 You will hear that the first duty is to get
land and money, place and name.
MN 1.199 11 We can...never tell where to set the first
stone.
MN 1.215 2 To every reform...early disgusts are
incident, so that the
disciple is surprised at the very hour of his first triumphs with
chagrins, and
sickness, and a general distrust;...
MR 1.238 5 Consider further the difference between the
first and second
owner of property.
MR 1.248 18 Let [a man]...put all his practices back on
their first thoughts...
LT 1.274 17 ...the compromise made with the
slaveholder, not much
noticed at first, every day appears more flagrant mischief to the
American
constitution.
LT 1.291 9 ...all the tongues of to-day will of course
at first defame what is
noble;...
Con 1.295 17 ...now [Conservatism], now [Innovation]
gets the day, and
still the fight renews itself as if for the first time...
Con 1.306 12 In his first consideration how to feed,
clothe, and warm
himself, [the youth] is met by warnings on every hand that this thing
and
that thing have owners...
Con 1.313 11 Consider [the order of things] as the work
of a...progressive
necessity, which, from the first pulsation in the first animal
life...has
advanced thus far.
Con 1.313 12 Consider [the order of things] as the work
of a...progressive
necessity, which, from the first pulsation in the first animal
life...has
advanced thus far.
Con 1.315 9 ...on the first day [Friar Bernard] saw and
talked with gentle
mothers with their babes at their breasts...
Tran 1.329 1 The first thing we have to say respecting
what are called new
views here in New England...is, that they are not new...
Tran 1.329 15 As thinkers, mankind have ever divided
into two sects, Materialists and Idealists; the first class founding on
experience, the second
on consciousness;...
Tran 1.329 16 As thinkers, mankind have ever divided
into two sects, Materialists and Idealists;...the first class beginning
to think from the data
of the senses...
Tran 1.330 13 ...I, [the idealist] says, affirm...facts
which in their first
appearance to us assume a native superiority to material facts...
Tran 1.330 16 ...I, [the idealist] says, affirm...facts
which in their first
appearance to us assume a native superiority to material facts,
degrading
these into a language by which the first are to be spoken;...
Tran 1.349 7 Each cause as it is called...say
Calvinism, or Unitarianism-
becomes speedily a little shop, where the article, let it have been at
first
never so subtle and ethereal, is now made up into portable and
convenient
cakes...
Tran 1.357 15 ...[strong spirits] by happiness of
greater momentum lose no
time, but take the right road at first.
YA 1.382 11 The science is confident, and surely the
poverty is real. If any
means could be found to bring these two together! This was one design
of
the projectors of the Associations which are now making their first
feeble
experiments.
YA 1.383 9 Undoubtedly, abundant mistakes will be made
by these first
adventurers [the Communities]...
Hist 2.4 3 ...Egypt, Greece, Rome, Gaul, Britain,
America, lie folded
already in the first man.
Hist 2.4 25 Every revolution was first a thought in one
man's mind...
Hist 2.6 5 ...instinctively we at first hold to
[property] with swords and laws
and wide and complex combinations.
Hist 2.12 2 We remember the forest-dwellers, the first
temples, the
adherence to the first type...
Hist 2.28 9 I have seen the first monks and anchorets,
without crossing seas
or centuries.
Hist 2.28 16 More than once some individual has
appeared to me with... such commanding contemplation, a haughty
beneficiary begging in the
name of God, as made good to the nineteenth century...the first
Capuchins.
Hist 2.30 15 Beside its primary value as the first
chapter of the history of
Europe...[the story of Prometheus] gives the history of religion...
Hist 2.33 20 These figures, [Goethe] would say, these
Chirons, Griffins, Phorkyas, Helen and Leda, are somewhat, and do exert
a specific influence
on the mind. So far then are they...as real to-day as in the first
Olympiad.
Hist 2.38 9 No man can...guess what faculty or feeling
a new object shall
unlock, any more than he can draw to-day the face of a person whom he
shall see to-morrow for the first time.
SR 2.45 12 ...our first thought is rendered back to us
by the trumpets of the
Last Judgment.
SR 2.75 25 If our young men miscarry in their first
enterprises they lose all
heart.
SR 2.80 21 ...the immortal light...will beam over the
universe as on the first
morning.
SR 2.81 22 Our first journeys discover to us the
indifference of places.
SR 2.86 2 A singular equality may be observed between
the great men of
the first and of the last ages;...
Comp 2.126 25 [The death of a friend] permits or
constrains...the reception
of new influences that prove of the first importance to the next
years;...
Lov1 2.169 4 Nature...in the first sentiment of
kindness anticipates already
a benevolence which shall lose all particular regards in its general
light.
Lov1 2.170 14 ...[love] is a fire that kindling its
first embers in the narrow
nook of a private bosom...glows and enlarges...
Lov1 2.170 23 He who paints [love] at the first period
will lose some of its
later...traits.
Lov1 2.171 4 ...the first condition is that we must
leave a too close and
lingering adherence to facts...
Lov1 2.184 11 ...even love...must become more
impersonal every day. Of
this at first it gives no hint.
Lov1 2.187 15 At last [lovers] discover that all which
at first drew them
together...was deciduous...
Fdsp 2.193 6 ...as soon as the stranger begins to
intrude...his defects, into
the conversation, it is all over. He has heard the first, the last and
best he
will ever hear from us.
Fdsp 2.194 27 High thanks I owe you, excellent lovers,
who...enlarge the
meaning of all my thoughts. These are new poetry of the first Bard...
Fdsp 2.203 9 I knew a man who under a certain religious
frenzy...spoke to
the conscience of every person he encountered, and that with great
insight
and beauty. At first he was resisted...
Fdsp 2.211 17 To those whom we admire and love, at
first we cannot [speak on even terms].
Prd1 2.222 27 The first class have common sense; the
second, taste; and
the third, spiritual perception.
Prd1 2.233 10 The scholar shames us by his bifold life.
... Yesterday, radiant with the light of an ideal world in which he
lives, the first of men; and now oppressed by wants and by sickness,
for which he must thank
himself.
Prd1 2.233 24 Is it not better that a man should accept
the first pains and
mortifications of this sort...as hints that he must expect no other
good than
the just fruit of his own labor and self-denial?
Hsm1 2.257 10 The first step of worthiness will be to
disabuse us of our
superstitious associations with places and times...
Hsm1 2.259 6 The lesson [many extraordinary young men]
gave in their
first aspirations is yet true;...
Hsm1 2.262 9 [Culture] will not now run against an axe
at the first step out
of the beaten track of opinion.
Cir 2.301 1 The eye is the first circle;...
Cir 2.301 8 We are all our lifetime reading the copious
sense of this first of
forms [the circle].
Cir 2.304 17 ...in its first and narrowest pulses [the
heart] already tends
outward with a vast force...
Cir 2.304 20 Every ultimate fact is only the first of a
new series.
Cir 2.305 2 Lo! on the other side rises also a man and
draws a circle around
the circle we had just pronounced the outline of the sphere. Then
already is
our first speaker not man, but only a first speaker.
Cir 2.305 3 Lo! on the other side rises also a man and
draws a circle around
the circle we had just pronounced the outline of the sphere. Then
already is
our first speaker not man, but only a first speaker.
Cir 2.320 23 Now for the first time seem I to know any
thing rightly.
Int 2.325 15 The first questions are always to be
asked...
Int 2.329 16 If we consider what persons have
stimulated and profited us, we shall perceive the superiority of the
spontaneous or intuitive principle
over the arithmetical or logical. The first contains the second, but
virtual
and latent.
Int 2.332 1 It seems as if we needed only the stillness
and composed
attitude of the library to seize the thought. But we come in, and are
as far
from it as at first.
Int 2.335 5 To genius must always go two gifts, the
thought and the
publication. The first is revelation...
Int 2.335 10 [The thought] is...a form of thought now
for the first time
bursting into the universe...
Int 2.337 3 Who is the first drawing-master?
Int 2.342 1 He in whom the love of repose predominates
will accept the
first creed...he meets...
Int 2.342 2 He in whom the love of repose predominates
will accept...the
first philosophy...he meets...
Int 2.342 2 He in whom the love of repose predominates
will accept...the
first political party he meets...
Int 2.343 21 A new doctrine seems at first a subversion
of all our opinions, tastes, and manner of living.
Art1 2.355 18 Presently we pass to some other object,
which rounds itself
into a whole as did the first;...
Art1 2.356 12 ...what astonished and fascinated me in
the first work [of
art], astonished me in the second work also;...
Pt1 3.7 15 Criticism is infested with a cant of
materialism, which assumes
that manual skill and activity is the first merit of all men...
Pt1 3.19 18 A shrewd country-boy goes to the city for
the first time, and the
complacent citizen is not satisfied with his little wonder.
Pt1 3.22 1 ...each word was at first a stroke of
genius...
Pt1 3.22 3 ...each word...obtained currency because for
the moment it
symbolized the world to the first speaker and to the hearer.
Pt1 3.22 14 This expression or naming is not art, but a
second nature, grown out of the first...
Pt1 3.32 6 An imaginative book renders us much more
service at first, by
stimulating us through its tropes, than afterwards when we arrive at
the
precise sense of the author.
Pt1 3.34 26 The morning-redness happens to be the
favorite meteor to the
eyes of Jacob Behmen, and comes to stand to him for truth and faith;
and, he believes, should stand for the same realities to every reader.
But the first
reader prefers as naturally the symbol of a mother and child...
Exp 3.64 18 So many things are unsettled which it is of
the first importance
to settle;...
Exp 3.71 11 When I converse with a profound mind...I am
at first apprised
of my vicinity to a new and excellent region of life.
Exp 3.71 25 I clap my hands in infantine joy and
amazement before the
first opening to me of this august magnificence...
Exp 3.72 9 Since neither now nor yesterday began/ These
thoughts, which
have been ever, nor yet can/ A man be found who their first entrance
knew./
Exp 3.82 2 A wise and hardy physician will say, Come
out of that, as the
first condition of advice.
Exp 3.84 6 When I receive a new gift, I do not macerate
my body to make
the account square, for if I should die I could not make the account
square. The benefit overran the merit the first day, and has overrun
the merit ever
since.
Chr1 3.100 4 It is much that [the ingenious man] does
not accept the
conventional opinions and practices. That non-conformity will remain a
goad and remembrancer, and every inquirer will have to dispose of him,
in
the first place.
Chr1 3.106 14 They are a relief from literature,--these
fresh draughts from
the sources of thought and sentiment; as we read...the first lines of
written
prose and verse of a nation.
Chr1 3.111 21 ...when men shall meet as they ought,
each a benefactor...it
should be a festival of nature which all things announce. Of such
friendship, love in the sexes is the first symbol...
Mrs1 3.123 3 ...the word [gentleman] denotes
good-nature or benevolence; manhood first, and then gentleness.
Mrs1 3.123 20 Power first, or no leading class.
Mrs1 3.125 18 A plentiful fortune is reckoned
necessary...to the completion
of this man of the world; and it is a material deputy which walks
through
the dance which the first [power] has led.
Mrs1 3.127 20 There exists a strict relation between
the class of power and
the exclusive and polished circles. The last are always filled or
filling from
the first.
Mrs1 3.131 27 The maiden at her first ball...believes
that there is a ritual
according to which every act and compliment must be performed...
Mrs1 3.133 24 ...the first thing man requires of man is
reality...
Mrs1 3.134 6 ...[a gentleman's] eyes look straight
forward, and he assures
the other party, first of all, that he has been met.
Mrs1 3.136 5 ...the first point of courtesy must always
be truth...
Mrs1 3.142 20 ...Napoleon said of [Charles James
Fox]...Mr. Fox will
always hold the first place in an assembly at the Tuileries.
Mrs1 3.143 18 ...a comic disparity would be felt, if we
should enter the
acknowledged first circles [of fashion] and apply these terrific
standards of
justice, beauty and benefit to the individuals actually found there.
Mrs1 3.147 13 ...For 't is the eternal law/ That first
in beauty shall be first
in might./
Gts 3.160 22 ...as it is always pleasing to see a man
eat bread, or drink
water, in the house or out of doors, so it is always a great
satisfaction to
supply these first wants.
Nat2 3.169 24 The knapsack of custom falls off [the man
of the world's] back with the first step he takes into these precincts
[of the forest].
Nat2 3.176 8 In every landscape the point of
astonishment is the meeting of
the sky and the earth, and that is seen from the first hillock as well
as from
the top of the Alleghanies.
Nat2 3.180 6 Now we learn what patient periods must
round themselves
before the rock is formed; then before the rock is broken, and the
first
lichen race has disintegrated the thinnest external plate into soil...
Nat2 3.180 15 It is a long way from granite to the
oyster; farther yet to
Plato and the preaching of the immortality of the soul. Yet all must
come, as surely as the first atom has two sides.
Nat2 3.180 17 Motion or change and identity or rest are
the first and second
secrets of nature...
Nat2 3.181 16 ...the artist still goes back for
materials and begins again
with the first elements on the most advanced stage;...
Nat2 3.181 26 The men, though young, having tasted the
first drop from the
cup of thought, are already dissipated...
Nat2 3.183 26 Common sense...recognizes the fact at
first sight in chemical
experiment.
Nat2 3.186 11 [Nature]...has secured the symmetrical
growth of the [the
child's] bodily frame by all these attitudes and exertions,--an end of
the first
importance...
Nat2 3.193 17 What shall we say of this omnipresent
appearance of that
first projectile impulse...
Pol1 3.203 10 Gift...makes [property] as really the new
owner's as labor
made it the first owner's...
Pol1 3.213 8 Every man finds a sanction for his
simplest claims and deeds, in decisions of his own mind, which he calls
Truth and Holiness. ... This
truth and justice men presently endeavor to make application of
to...the
protection of life and property. Their first endeavors, no doubt, are
very
awkward.
Pol1 3.213 10 ...absolute right is the first
governor;...
NR 3.248 7 My companion assumes to know my mood and
habit of
thought, and we go on from explanation to explanation until all is said
which words can, and we leave matters just as they were at first...
NER 3.254 13 ...it was directly in the spirit and
genius of the age, what
happened in one instance when a church censured and threatened to
excommunicate one of its members...the threatened individual
immediately
excommunicated the church, in a public and formal process. This...was
excellent when it was done the first time...
NER 3.266 5 ...let there be one man, let there be truth
in two men, in ten
men, then is concert for the first time possible;...
NER 3.282 12 This open channel to the highest life is
the first and last
reality...
UGM 4.3 7 In the legends of the Gautama, the first men
ate the earth and
found it deliciously sweet.
UGM 4.10 4 If we limit ourselves to the first
advantages, a sober grace
adheres to the mineral and botanic kingdoms, which, in the highest
moments, comes up as the charm of nature...
UGM 4.10 14 The eye repeats every day the first eulogy
on things,--He
saw that they were good.
UGM 4.10 24 There are advancements to numbers, anatomy,
architecture, astronomy, little suspected at first...
UGM 4.17 26 The high functions of the intellect are so
allied that some
imaginative power usually appears in all eminent minds, even in
arithmeticians of the first class...
UGM 4.22 21 Every child of the Saxon race is educated
to wish to be first.
UGM 4.23 2 I like the first Caesar;...
PPh 4.45 19 The first period of a nation, as of an
individual, is the period of
unconscious strength.
PPh 4.51 9 The first [unity] is the course or
gravitation of mind;...
PPh 4.52 4 Each student adheres, by temperament and by
habit, to the first
or to the second of these gods of the mind [unity or diversity].
PPh 4.65 26 [Plato] said, Culture; but he first
admitted its basis, and gave
immeasurably the first place to advantages of nature.
PPh 4.66 16 In the Republic [Plato] insists on the
temperaments of the
youth, as first of the first.
PNR 4.89 13 It was a high scheme, his absolute
privilege for the best...as
the premium which [Plato] would set on grandeur. There shall be exempts
of two kinds: first, those who by demerit have put themselves below
protection,--outlaws;...
SwM 4.105 15 ...the proximity of these geniuses, one or
other of whom had
introduced all his leading ideas, makes Swedenborg another example of
the
difficulty...of proving...the first birth and annunciation of one of
the laws of
nature.
SwM 4.112 26 [Swedenborg] noted that in [nature]
proceeding from first
principles through her several subordinations, there was no state
through
which she did not pass...
SwM 4.115 23 Was it strange that a genius so bold [as
Swedenborg]... should conceive that he might attain the science of all
sciences, to unlock
the meaning of the world? In the first volume of the Animal Kingdom, he
broaches the subject in a remarkable note...
SwM 4.117 27 One would say that as soon as men had the
first hint that
every sensible object...subsists...as a picture-language to tell
another story
of beings and duties, other science would be put by...
SwM 4.128 16 I know how delicious is this cup of
love...but it is a child's
clinging to his toy; an attempt...to keep the picture-alphabet through
which
our first lessons are prettily conveyed.
SwM 4.145 22 By the science of experiment and use,
[Swedenborg] made
his first steps...
SwM 4.145 27 ...ascending by just degrees from events
to their summits
and causes, [Swedenborg] was fired with piety at the harmonies he felt,
and
abandoned himself to his joy and worship. This was his first service
[to
mankind].
SwM 4.146 7 ...if [Swedenborg] staggered under the
trance of delight, the
more excellent is the spectacle he saw, the realities of being which
beam
and blaze through him, and which no infirmities of the prophet are
suffered
to obscure; and he renders a second passive service to men, not less
than the
first, perhaps, in the great circle of being...
MoS 4.150 23 The genius is a genius by the first look
he casts on any
object.
MoS 4.153 4 The first [men of ideas] had leaped to
conclusions not yet
ripe, and say more than is true;...
MoS 4.160 20 We want some coat woven of elastic steel,
stout as the first
and limber as the second.
MoS 4.173 27 The first dangerous symptom I report is,
the levity of
intellect;...
MoS 4.174 25 [The levity of intellect] is hobgoblin the
first;...
MoS 4.184 19 Each man woke in the morning with...a
spirit for action and
passion without bounds...but, on the first motion to prove his
strength,-- hands, feet, senses, gave way and would not serve him.
ShP 4.191 9 Choose any other thing...out of the
national feeling and
history, and...[the great man's] powers would be expended in the first
preparations.
ShP 4.192 17 The secure possession, by the stage, of
the public mind, is of
the first importance to the poet who works for it.
ShP 4.194 13 [Sculpture in Egypt and in Greece] was the
ornament of the
temple wall: at first a rude relief carved on pediments...
ShP 4.195 10 ...the amount of [Shakespeare's]
indebtedness may be
inferred from Malone's laborious computations in regard to the First,
Second and Third parts of Henry VI....
ShP 4.195 21 The first play [Shakespeare's Henry VIII]
was written by a
superior, thoughtful man, with a vicious ear.
ShP 4.203 1 Ben Jonson...had no suspicion of the
elastic fame whose first
vibrations [Shakespeare] was attempting.
NMW 4.224 5 The first [conservative] class is timid,
selfish, illiberal...
NMW 4.233 10 Napoleon had been the first man of the
world, if his ends
had been purely public.
GoW 4.267 5 The first act, which was to be an
experiment, becomes a
sacrament.
GoW 4.269 9 There have been times when [the writer] was
a sacred person: he wrote...the first hymns...
GoW 4.277 11 ...[Goethe] flung into literature, in his
Mephistopheles, the
first organic figure that has been added for some ages...
GoW 4.277 21 Wilhelm Meister is a novel in every sense,
the first of its
kind...
GoW 4.289 27 This cheerful laborer [Goethe]...without
relaxation or rest... worked on for eighty years with the steadiness of
his first zeal.
GoW 4.290 22 The secret of genius is...first, last,
midst and without end, to
honor every truth by use.
ET1 5.3 7 ...I remember the pleasure of that first walk
on English ground...
ET1 5.3 11 For the first time for many months we were
forced to check the
saucy habit of travellers' criticism...
ET1 5.5 3 I have...found writers superior to their
books, and I cling to my
first belief that a strong head will dispose fast enough of these
impediments...
ET1 5.17 4 Tristram Shandy was one of [Carlyle's] first
books after
Robinson Crusoe...
ET1 5.21 21 [Wordsworth] had never gone farther than
the first part [of
Goethe's Wilhelm Meister];...
ET1 5.22 24 [Wordsworth's] second [sonnet on Fingal's
Cave] alludes to
the name of the cave, which is Cave of Music; the first to the
circumstance
of its being visited by the promiscuous company of the steamboat.
ET1 5.23 3 This recitation [of his sonnets by
Wordsworth] was so unlooked
for and surprising...that I at first was near to laugh;...
ET1 5.23 17 I said Tinturn Abbey appeared to be the
favorite poem with
the public, but more contemplative readers preferred the first books of
the
Excursion, and the Sonnets.
ET4 5.54 27 The sources from which tradition derives
[the English] stock
are mainly three. And first they are of the oldest blood of the
world,--the
Celtic.
ET4 5.60 10 ...the old fossil world shows that the
first steps of reducing the
chaos were confided to saurians and other huge and horrible animals...
ET4 5.62 11 It took many generations to trim and comb
and perfume the
first boat-load of Norse pirates into royal highnesses...
ET4 5.65 16 I remarked the stoutness [of the English]
on my first landing at
Liverpool;...
ET4 5.71 11 If in every efficient man there is first a
fine animal, in the
English race it is of the best breed...
ET5 5.94 9 ...from first to last [England] is a museum
of anomalies.
ET7 5.123 1 Lord Collingwood would not accept his medal
for victory on
14 February, 1797, if he did not receive one for victory on 1st June,
1794;...
ET8 5.137 22 Compare the tone of the French and of the
English press: the
first querulous, captious, sensitive about English opinion;...
ET10 5.154 15 ...I found the two disgraces in [Wood's
Athenae
Oxonienses]...are, first, disloyalty to Church and State, and, second,
to be
born poor, or come to poverty.
ET10 5.168 12 Steam from the first hissed and screamed
to warn him; it
was dreadful with its explosion, and crushed the engineer.
ET11 5.174 25 The things these English have done were
not done...without
wisdom and conduct; and the first hands...were often challenged to show
their right to their honors...
ET11 5.178 9 Sir Henry Wotton says of the first Duke of
Buckingham, He
was born at Brookeby in Leicestershire...
ET11 5.184 3 It was remarked, on the 10th April, 1848
(the day of the
Chartist demonstration), that the upper classes [in England] were for
the
first time actively interesting themselves in their own defence...
ET12 5.203 11 In the Bodleian Library, Dr. Bandinel
showed me...the first
Bible printed at Mentz...
ET13 5.219 10 The [English] universities also are
parcel of the
ecclesiastical system, and their first design is to form the clergy.
ET13 5.224 6 The doctrine of the Old Testament is the
religion of England. The first leaf of the New Testament it does not
open.
ET13 5.224 19 Abroad with my wife, writes Pepys
piously, the first time
that ever I rode in my own coach; which do make my heart rejoice and
praise God...
ET14 5.240 4 Bacon, capable of ideas, yet devoted to
ends, required in his
map of the mind, first of all, universality...
ET14 5.258 2 There are all degrees in poetry, and we
must be thankful for
every beautiful talent. But it is only a first success, when the ear is
gained.
ET14 5.260 13 ...the two complexions, or two styles of
mind [in England]... are ever in counterpoise, interacting
mutually...these two nations, of genius
and of animal force, though the first consist of only a dozen souls and
the
second of twenty millions, forever by their discord and their accord
yield
the power of the English State.
ET15 5.265 23 ...[Mowbray Morris] told us that the
daily printing [of the
London Times] was then 35,000 copies; that on the 1st March, 1848, the
greatest number ever printed--54,000--were issued;...
ET15 5.266 16 ...[the London Times] has never wanted
the first pens for
occasional assistance.
ET15 5.269 25 Every slip of an Oxonian or Cantabrigian
who writes his
first leader assumes that we subdued the earth before we sat down to
write
this particular [London] Times.
ET15 5.270 19 Sympathizing with, and speaking for the
class that rules the
hour, yet being apprised of every ground-swell...[the editors of the
London
Times] detect the first tremblings of change.
ET16 5.282 15 This cup or little boat, in which the
magnet was made to
float on water and so show the north, was probably [the compass's]
first
form...
ET17 5.294 16 We [Emerson and Martineau] found Mr.
Wordsworth
asleep on the sofa. He was at first silent and indisposed...
ET17 5.295 8 [Wordsworth] had thought an elder brother
of Tennyson at
first the better poet...
ET18 5.304 5 [The English] are expiating the wrongs of
India by benefits; first, in works for the irrigation of the
peninsula...
ET19 5.312 20 ...I was given to understand in my
childhood...that [Englishmen's] virtues did not come out until they
quarrelled; they did not
strike twelve the first time;...
F 6.3 19 In our first steps to gain our wishes we come
upon immovable
limitations.
F 6.5 17 On the first [the appointed day], neither balm
nor physician can
save/...
F 6.15 20 One leaf [Nature] lays down, a floor of
granite;...a thousand ages, and a layer of marl and mud;...her first
misshapen animals...
F 6.35 25 The first and worse races are dead.
F 6.36 26 Christopher Wren said of the beautiful King's
College chapel, that if anybody would tell him where to lay the first
stone, he would build
such another.
F 6.36 27 ...where shall we find the first atom in this
house of man...
F 6.39 4 ...the first cell converts itself into
stomach, mouth, nose, or nail, according to the want;...
Pow 6.54 8 [All successful men] believed...that there
was not a weak or a
cracked link in the chain that joins the first and last of things.
Pow 6.56 4 The first wealth is health.
Pow 6.60 2 The second man is as good as the
first,--perhaps better;...
Pow 6.60 3 The second man is as good as the
first,--perhaps better; but has
not stoutness or stomach, as the first has...
Pow 6.73 17 ...there are two economies which are the
best succedanea
which the case admits. The first is the stopping off decisively our
miscellaneous activity...
Pow 6.78 6 All the great speakers were bad speakers at
first.
Pow 6.78 14 No genius can recite a ballad at first
reading so well as
mediocrity can at the fifteenth or twentieth reading.
Pow 6.81 4 ...we infer that all success and all
conceivable benefit for man, is also, first or last, within his
reach...
Wth 6.85 2 As soon as a stranger is introduced into any
company, one of
the first questions which all wish to have answered, is, How does that
man
get his living?
Wth 6.98 17 ...pictures, engravings, statues and casts,
beside their first cost, entail expenses, as of galleries and keepers
for the exhibition;...
Wth 6.110 8 Britain, France and Germany...send
out...their millions of poor
people, to share the crop. At first we employ them, and increase our
prosperity;...
Wth 6.111 26 The first of these measures [of economy]
is that each man's
expense must proceed from his character.
Wth 6.122 16 When a citizen...comes out and buys land
in the country, his
first thought is to a fine outlook from his windows;...
Wth 6.126 16 The bread [a man] eats is first strength
and animal spirits;...
Ctr 6.143 5 ...the first boy has acquired much more
than these poor games
along with them.
Ctr 6.163 1 If there is any great and good thing in
store for you, it will not
come at the first or the second call...
Ctr 6.164 26 ...in an old community a well-born
proprietor is usually
found, after the first heats of youth, to be a careful husband...
Bhr 6.172 13 [Manners'] first service is very low...
Bhr 6.180 4 When the eyes say one thing and the tongue
another, a
practised man relies on the language of the first.
Bhr 6.184 2 [The successful man of the world] knows
that troops behave as
they are handled at first;...
Bhr 6.186 6 Society is very swift in its instincts,
and, if you do not belong
to it, resists and sneers at you, or quietly drops you. The first
weapon
enrages the party attacked;...
Bhr 6.190 9 Men take each other's measure, when they
meet for the first
time...
Bhr 6.192 25 That is the charm in all good novels, as
it is the charm in all
good histories, that the heroes mutually understand, from the first...
Wsp 6.222 4 The countryman leaving his native village
for the first time
and going abroad, finds all his habits broken up.
Wsp 6.241 11 There will be a new church founded on
moral science; at
first cold and naked...
CbW 6.248 18 Mankind divides itself into two
classes,--benefactors and
malefactors. The second class is vast, the first a handful.
CbW 6.253 13 ...the first lesson of history is the good
of evil.
CbW 6.259 14 ...[an absorbing passion] is the heat
which...overcomes the
friction of crossing thresholds and first addresses in society...
CbW 6.263 2 If now in this connection of discourse we
should venture on
laying down the first obvious rules of life, I will not here repeat the
first
rule of economy...
CbW 6.263 3 ...I will not here repeat the first rule of
economy...
CbW 6.273 16 With the first class of men our friendship
or good
understanding goes quite behind all accidents of estrangement...
CbW 6.274 3 It makes no difference, in looking back
five years...whether
you have been lodged on the first floor or the attic;...
Bty 6.288 12 ...the first step into thought lifts this
mountain of necessity.
Bty 6.294 25 Veracity first of all, and forever.
Bty 6.306 12 ...there is a climbing scale of culture,
from the first agreeable
sensation which a sparkling gem or a scarlet stain affords the eye...
Bty 6.306 24 Wherever we begin, thither our steps
tend...the first stair on
the scale to the temple of the Mind.
Ill 6.311 16 Our first mistake is the belief that the
circumstance gives the
joy which we give to the circumstance.
SS 7.4 10 When [my new friend] bought a house, the
first thing he did was
to plant trees.
SS 7.10 5 [The ends of thought] reach down to that
depth...where the
question is, Which is first, man or men?...
SS 7.11 10 As soon as the first wants are satisfied,
the higher wants become
imperative.
Civ 7.29 13 ...the astronomer, having by an observation
fixed the place of a
star,--by so simple an expedient as waiting six months and then
repeating
his observation, contrived to put the diameter of the earth's
orbit...between
his first observation and his second...
Art2 7.38 4 Thought is the seed of action; but action
is as much its second
form as thought is its first.
Art2 7.38 23 From the first imitative babble of a child
to the despotism of
eloquence;...Art is the spirit's combination of things to serve its
end.
Art2 7.38 24 ...from [the child!s] first pile of toys
or chip bridge to the
masonry of Minot Rock Lighthouse or the Pacific Railroad;...Art is the
Spirit's voluntary use and combination of things to serve its end.
Art2 7.39 3 ...from its first to its last works, Art is
the spirit's voluntary use
and combination of things to serve its end.
Art2 7.40 20 ...to make anything useful or beautiful,
the individual must be
submitted to the universal mind. In the first place let us consider
this in
reference to the useful arts.
Art2 7.41 12 The first and last lesson of the useful
arts is that Nature
tyrannizes over our works.
Art2 7.50 3 The first time you hear [good poetry], it
sounds...as if copied
out of some invisible tablet in the Eternal mind...
Art2 7.54 5 There was no wilfulness in the savages in
this perpetuating of
their first rude abodes.
Art2 7.54 5 The first form in which [savages] built a
house would be the
first form of their public and religious edifice also.
Art2 7.54 6 The first form in which [savages] built a
house would be the
first form of their public and religious edifice also.
Art2 7.54 27 The amphitheatre of the old Romans,--any
one may see its
origin who looks at the crowd running together to see any fight...in
the
street. The first comers gather round in a circle...
Elo1 7.64 11 Socrates says: If any one wishes to
converse with the meanest
of the Lacedaemonians, he will at first find him despicable in
conversation...
Elo1 7.67 5 There is a tablet [in the audience] for
every line [the orator] can
inscribe, though he should mount to the highest levels. Humble persons
are
conscious of new illumination;...delicate spirits...who now hear their
own
native language for the first time...
Elo1 7.68 11 ...as we must be fed and warmed before we
can do any work
well,--even the best,--so is this semi-animal exuberance [in the
orator], like
a good stove, of the first necessity in a cold house.
Elo1 7.73 1 ...[Homer] does not fail to arm Ulysses at
first with this power
of overcoming all opposition by the blandishments of speech.
Elo1 7.85 9 The orator...must be a substantial
personality. Then, first, he
must have power of statement...
Elo1 7.93 25 ...first and last, [eloquence] must still
be at bottom a biblical
statement of fact.
DL 7.105 26 What a holiday is the first snow in which
Twoshoes can be
trusted abroad!
DL 7.106 3 What art can paint or gild any object in
afterlife with the glow
which Nature gives to the first baubles of childhood!
DL 7.106 5 St. Peter's cannot have the magical power
over us that the red
and gold covers of our first picture-book possessed.
DL 7.106 16 The first ride into the country, the first
bath in running water... are new chapters of joy [to the child].
DL 7.106 17 The first ride into the country...the first
time the skates are put
on...are new chapters of joy [to the child].
DL 7.106 18 The first ride into the country...the first
game out of doors in
moonlight...are new chapters of joy [to the child].
DL 7.111 6 ...what idea predominates in our houses?
Thrift first, then
convenience and pleasure.
DL 7.118 13 The great make us feel, first of all, the
indifference of
circumstances.
DL 7.120 14 ...who can see unmoved...the first solitary
joys of literary
vanity...
DL 7.127 5 The first glance we meet may satisfy us that
matter is the
vehicle of higher powers than its own...
DL 7.129 14 In the progress of each man's character,
his relations to the
best men, which at first seem only the romances of youth, acquire a
graver
importance;...
DL 7.131 4 I go to Rome and see on the walls of the
Vatican the
Transfiguration, painted by Raphael, reckoned the first picture in the
world;...
Farm 7.137 6 The first farmer was the first man...
Farm 7.137 7 The first farmer was the first man...
Farm 7.137 19 ...the profession [of farming] has in all
eyes its ancient
charm, as standing nearest to God, the first cause.
Farm 7.139 23 In the town where I live...most of the
first settlers (in 1635), should they reappear on the farms to-day,
would find their own blood and
names still in possession.
Farm 7.144 1 No particle of oxygen can rust or wear,
but has the same
energy as on the first morning.
Farm 7.147 11 Set out a pine-tree, and it dies in the
first year...
Farm 7.151 3 There has been a nightmare bred in England
of indigestion
and spleen among landlords and loom-lords, namely, the dogma that...the
plight of every new generation is worse than of the foregoing, because
the
first comers take up the best lands;...
Farm 7.151 11 The first planter...takes poor land.
WD 7.161 9 What shall we say of the ocean
telegraph...whose sudden
performance astonished mankind as if the intellect were...shooting the
first
thrills of life and thought through the unwilling brain?
WD 7.161 13 There does not seem any limit to these new
informations of
the same Spirit that made the elements at first...
WD 7.168 10 The days are ever divine as to the first
Aryans.
WD 7.173 10 Hume's doctrine was that...the girl
equipped for her first ball, and the orator returning triumphant from
the debate, had different means, but the same quantity of pleasant
excitement.
WD 7.184 1 There are people...who love at first sight
and hate at first
sight;...
WD 7.184 2 There are people...who love at first sight
and hate at first
sight;...
Boks 7.193 18 It is easy...to demonstrate that though
[a man] should read
from dawn till dark, for sixty years, he must die in the first alcoves
[of the
libraries].
Boks 7.195 7 In the first place, all books that get
fairly into the vital air of
the world were written by the successful class...
Boks 7.198 5 Of the old Greek books, I think there are
five which we
cannot spare... ... 3. Aeschylus...who has given us under a thin veil
the first
plantation of Europe.
Boks 7.199 10 Here [in Plato] is...the picture of the
best persons, sentiments
and manners, by the first master...
Clbs 7.236 1 ...in the hagiology of each nation, the
lawgiver was in each
case some man...whose sympathy brought him face to face with the
extremes of society. Jesus, Menu, the first Buddhist, Mahomet,
Zertusht, Pythagoras, are examples.
Clbs 7.237 8 One of the best records of the great
German master who
towered over all his contemporaries in the first thirty years of this
century, is his conversations as recorded by Eckermann;...
Clbs 7.240 5 What can you do with an eloquent man? No
rules of debate... no gag-laws can be contrived that his first syllable
will not set aside...
Clbs 7.243 2 It was the Marchioness of Rambouillet who
first got the
horses out of and the scholars into the palaces...
Clbs 7.244 5 ...we have records of the brilliant
society that Edinburgh
boasted in the first decade of this century.
Clbs 7.245 3 The man of thought...the man of manners
and culture, whom
you so much wish to find,--each of these is wishing to be found. Each
wishes...to exchange his gifts for yours; and the first hint of a
select and
intelligent company is welcome.
Clbs 7.248 1 ...to a club met for conversation a supper
is a good basis, as
it...puts pedantry and business to the door. All are in good humor and
at
leisure, which are the first conditions of discourse;...
Cour 7.256 1 I need not show how much [courage] is
esteemed, for the
people give it the first rank.
Cour 7.259 2 ...the protection which a house...even the
first accumulation
of savings gives, go in all times to generate this taint of the
respectable
classes.
Cour 7.262 3 Coleridge has preserved an anecdote of an
officer in the
British Navy who told him that when he, in his first boat expedition...
accompanied Sir Alexander Ball, as we were rowing up to the vessel we
were to attack...I was overpowered with fear...
Cour 7.265 20 The torments of martyrdoms are probably
most keenly felt
by the by-standers. The torments are illusory. The first suffering is
the last
suffering...
Cour 7.271 13 Governor Wise of Virginia, in the record
of his first
interviews with his prisoner [John Brown], appeared to great advantage.
Cour 7.272 19 The best act of the marvellous genius of
Greece was its first
act;...
Suc 7.287 7 The Saxon is taught from his infancy to
wish to be first.
Suc 7.288 25 We are not scrupulous. What we ask is
victory, without
regard to the cause;...the way of the Talleyrands, prudent people...who
detect the first moment of decline and throw themselves on the instant
on
the winning side.
Suc 7.291 10 ...I think we shall agree in my first rule
for success...
Suc 7.292 25 Self-trust is the first secret of
success...
Suc 7.298 11 Remember what befalls a city boy who goes
for the first time
into the October woods.
Suc 7.299 14 Is the old church which gave you the first
lessons of religious
life...only boards or brick and mortar?
Suc 7.301 5 If we follow this hint [of correspondence]
into our intellectual
education, we shall find that it is...not new dogmas, and a logical
exposition
of the world, that are our first need;...
Suc 7.311 20 ...[the inner life] makes no progress; was
as wise in our first
memory of it as now;...
OA 7.318 23 ...if the question be the felicity of age,
I fear the first popular
judgments will be unfavorable.
PI 8.3 6 ...we must feed, wash, plant, build. These are
ends of necessity, and first in the order of Nature.
PI 8.6 7 The admission, never so covertly, that this
[material world] is a
makeshift, sets the dullest brain in ferment: our little sir, from his
first
tottering steps...does not like to be practised upon...
PI 8.11 6 First the fact; second its impression...
PI 8.22 1 This union of first and second sight reads
Nature to the end of
delight and of moral use.
PI 8.32 19 ...inestimable is the criticism of memory as
a corrective to first
impressions.
PI 8.32 20 We are dazzled at first by new words and
brilliancy of color...
PI 8.39 14 ...we demand of [the poet] what he demands
of himself,-- veracity, first of all.
PI 8.52 1 With the first note of the flute or horn...we
quit the world of
common sense...
PI 8.52 2 With...the first strain of a song, we quit
the world of common
sense...
PI 8.65 16 Literature warps away from life, though at
first it seems to bind
it.
PI 8.68 24 By successive states of mind all the facts
of Nature are for the
first time interpreted.
SA 8.79 23 'T is an inestimable hint that I owe to a
few persons of fine
manners, that they make behavior the very first sign of force...
SA 8.84 19 As long as men are born babes they will live
on credit for the
first fourteen or eighteen years of their life.
SA 8.87 21 When the young European emigrant, after a
summer's labor, puts on for the first time a new coat, he puts on much
more.
SA 8.94 13 ...[Madame de Stael] said...If it were not
for respect to human
opinions, I would not open my window to see the Bay of Naples for the
first time...
SA 8.94 19 Sainte-Beuve tells us of the privileged
circle at Coppet, that
after making an excursion one day, the party returned in two coaches
from
Chambery to Aix, on the way to Coppet. The first coach had many rueful
accidents to relate...
SA 8.99 19 Manners first, then conversation.
SA 8.106 3 ...what lessons can be devised for the
debauchee of sentiment? Was ever one converted? The innocence and
ignorance of the patient is the
first difficulty;...
Elo2 8.115 9 ...I think every one of us can remember
when our first
experiences made us for a time the victim and worshipper of the first
master
of this art [of eloquence] whom we happened to hear in the court-house
or
in the caucus.
Elo2 8.115 10 ...I think every one of us can remember
when our first
experiences made us for a time the victim and worshipper of the first
master
of this art [of eloquence] whom we happened to hear in the court-house
or
in the caucus.
Elo2 8.116 10 [The people] have sent their best men;
the young and ardent... went at the first draft, or the second...
Elo2 8.118 22 We have all attended meetings called for
some object in
which no one had beforehand any warm interest. Every speaker rose
unwillingly, and even his speech was a bad excuse; but it is only the
first
plunge which is formidable;...
Elo2 8.120 25 I have heard an eminent preacher say that
he learns from the
first tones of his voice on a Sunday morning whether he is to have a
successful day.
Elo2 8.123 1 When [John Quincy Adams] read his first
lectures in 1806, not only the students heard him with delight...
Res 8.138 27 I like the sentiment of the poor woman
who, coming...for the
first time to the seashore...said she was glad for once in her life to
see
something which there was enough of.
Res 8.139 24 [Nature] shows us only surfaces, but she
is million fathoms
deep. What spaces! what durations!...in humanity, millions of lives of
men
to collect the first observations on which our astronomy is built;...
Res 8.149 24 ...the guide kindled a Roman candle, and
held it here and
there shooting its fireballs successively into each crypt of the
groined roof [of the Mammoth Cave], disclosing its starry splendor, and
showing for the
first time what that plaything was good for.
Res 8.151 16 The first care of a man settling in the
country should be to
open the face of the earth to himself...
Res 8.152 17 ...in the first relentings of March [the
willow] hasten...
Comc 8.165 18 Smith...sent out a party into the swamp,
caught an Indian, and sent him home in the first ship to London...
QO 8.180 9 The first book tyrannizes over the second.
QO 8.187 18 If we observe the tenacity with which
nations cling to their
first types of costume...we shall think very well of the first men, or
ill of the
latest.
QO 8.187 24 ...if we learn how old are...the alternate
lotus-bud and leaf-stem
of our iron fences,-we shall think very well of the first men, or ill
of
the latest.
QO 8.187 26 ...shall we say that only the first men
were well alive...
QO 8.191 16 Next to the originator of a good sentence
is the first quoter of
it.
QO 8.199 17 ...does it not look...as if we stood...in a
circle of intelligences
that reached...back to the first geometer, bard, mason, carpenter,
planter, shepherd...
QO 8.199 18 ...does it not look...as if we stood...in a
circle of intelligences
that reached...back to the first negro, who...gave a shriller sound or
name
for the thing he saw and dealt with?
QO 8.201 23 Genius is in the first instance,
sensibility...
QO 8.203 7 He that comes second must needs quote him
that comes first.
QO 8.203 21 ...no man suspects the superior merit of
[Cook's or Henry's] description, until...the artist arrive, and mix so
much art with their picture
that the incomparable advantage of the first narrative appears.
PC 8.221 14 The first quality we know in matter is
centrality,-we call it
gravity...
PC 8.221 26 ...the first measure of a mind is its
centrality...
PC 8.225 9 ...time and space,-what are they? Our first
problems, which
we ponder all our lives through, and leave where we found them;...
PC 8.226 18 Every artist was first an amateur.
PPo 8.240 13 Solomon had three talismans: first, the
signet-ring by which
he commanded the spirits...
PPo 8.253 23 I have no hoarded treasure,/ Yet have I
rich content;/ The
first from Allah to the Shah,/ The last to Hafiz went./
PPo 8.255 5 ...Hafiz does not appear to have set any
great value on his
songs, since his scholars collected them for the first time after his
death.
PPo 8.258 6 This picture of the first days of
Spring...seems to belong to
Hafiz:-O'er the garden water goes the wind alone/ To rasp and to polish
the cheek of the wave;/ The fire is quenched on the dear hearthstone,/
But it
burns again on the tulips brave./
Insp 8.269 12 Our money is only a second best. We would
jump to buy
power with it, that is, intellectual perception moving the will. That
is first
best.
Insp 8.271 8 Everything which we hear for the first
time was expected by
the mind;...
Insp 8.272 8 Power is the first good.
Insp 8.279 25 Health is the first muse...
Insp 8.280 7 I honor health as the first muse...
Insp 8.285 23 At last it has become summer,/ And at the
first glimpse of
morning/ The busy early fly stings me/ Out of my sweet slumber./
Grts 8.305 5 There are to each function and department
of Nature
supplementary men: to geology...men, with a taste for mountains and
rocks, a quick eye for differences and for chemical changes. Give such,
first a
course in chemistry, and then a geological survey.
Grts 8.310 19 ...if the first rule is to obey your
native bias...the second rule
is concentration...
Imtl 8.324 1 In the first records of a nation in any
degree thoughtful and
cultivated, some belief in the life beyond life would...be suggested.
Imtl 8.324 7 ...The Egyptians are the first of mankind
who have affirmed
the immortality of the soul.
Imtl 8.324 27 ...the whole life of man in the first
ages was ponderously
determined on death;...
Imtl 8.333 25 ...proceeding to the enumeration of the
few simple elements
of the natural faith, the first fact that strikes us is our delight in
permanence.
Imtl 8.336 14 Nature does not, like the Empress Anne of
Russia, call
together all the architectural genius of the Empire to build and finish
and
furnish a palace of snow, to melt again to water in the first thaw.
Imtl 8.349 17 Nachiketas...said, O Death! let
Gautama...forget his anger
against me: this I choose for the first boon.
Dem1 10.5 1 ...we cannot get our hand on the first link
or fibre [of a
dream]...
Aris 10.34 22 The old French Revolution attracted to
its first movement all
the liberality, virtue, hope and poetry in Europe.
Aris 10.50 8 When old writers are consulted by young
writers who have
written their first book, they say, Publish it by all means; so only
can you
certainly know its quality.
Aris 10.53 4 The first example [of Genius] that occurs
is an extraordinary
gift of eloquence.
Aris 10.56 26 When a man begins to speak, the churl
will take him up by
disputing his first words...
Aris 10.59 24 The youth, having got through the first
thickets that oppose
his entrance into life...is left to himself...
PerF 10.71 24 ...gravity is as adhesive...water as
medicinal as on the first
day.
PerF 10.81 25 ...if we fall in with a cricket-club and
see the game masterly
played, the best player is the first of men;...
Chr2 10.93 9 ...our first experiences in moral, as in
intellectual nature, force us to discriminate a universal mind...
Chr2 10.99 15 ...slowly the soul unfolds itself in the
new man. It is partial
at first...
Chr2 10.101 23 ...to every serious mind Providence
sends from time to
time five or six or seven teachers who are of first importance to
him...
Chr2 10.119 3 [Growth] is not dangerous, any more than
the mother's
withdrawing her hands from the tottering babe, at his first walk across
the
nursery-floor...
Chr2 10.119 7 At first [the infant soul] is forlorn,
homeless;...
Edc1 10.125 11 We have already taken...(for aught I
know for the first time
in the world), the initial step...this, namely, that the poor man...is
allowed to
put his hand into the pocket of the rich, and say, You shall educate
me...
Edc1 10.130 16 If Newton come and first of men perceive
that not alone
certain bodies fall to the ground at a certain rate, but that all
bodies in the
Universe...fall always, and at one rate;...he extends the power of his
mind... over every cubic atom of his native planet...
Edc1 10.144 18 Here are the two capital facts [of
education], Genius and
Drill. The first is the inspiration in the well-born healthy child...
Edc1 10.154 7 The advantages of this system of
emulation and display are
so prompt and obvious...and tutor or schoolmaster in his first term can
apply it,-that it is not strange that this calomel of culture should be
a
popular medicine.
Edc1 10.157 11 Sympathy, the female force, which they
must use who
have not the first [will, the male power]...is more subtle and lasting
and
creative.
Supl 10.168 24 The first valuable power in a reasonable
mind, one would
say, was the power of plain statement...
SovE 10.188 21 We see the steady aim of Benefit in view
from the first.
SovE 10.200 26 You have perceived in the first fact of
your conscious life
here a miracle so astounding...as to exhaust wonder...
SovE 10.202 17 It is simply impossible to read the old
history of the first
century as it was read in the ninth;...
SovE 10.208 12 ...the first position I make is that
natural religion supplies
still all the facts which are disguised under the dogma of popular
creeds.
SovE 10.209 18 [The moral law] has not yet its first
hymn.
Prch 10.220 19 ...the sober eye finds something ghastly
in this [religious] empiricism. At first, delighted with the triumph of
the intellect...we are like
hunters on the scent...
Prch 10.230 3 [The clergy's] first duty is
self-possession founded on
knowledge.
Prch 10.237 8 Here is thought and love and truth and
duty, new as on the
first day of Adam and of angels.
MoL 10.249 5 Coleridge traces three silent revolutions,
of which the first
was when the clergy fell from the Church.
MoL 10.251 14 I asked the first [West Point] Cadet, Who
makes your bed? I do.
MoL 10.251 17 I asked the first [West Point] Cadet, Who
makes your bed? I do. Who fetches your water? I do. Who blacks your
shoes? I do. It was so
in every room. These are first steps to power.
Schr 10.271 19 There could always be traced...some
vestiges of a faith in
genius, as...in hospitalities; as if men would signify their sense that
genius
and virtue should not pay money for house and land and bread, because
they have...a first mortgage that takes effect before the right of the
present
proprietor.
Schr 10.279 22 Order is heaven's first law.
Schr 10.288 10 I had perhaps wiselier adhered to my
first purpose of
confining my illustration [of the scholar] to a single topic...
Plu 10.294 27 ...the first printed edition of the Greek
Works [of Plutarch] did not appear until 1572.
Plu 10.297 15 [Plutarch] is, among prose writers, what
Chaucer is among
English poets, a repertory for those who want the story without
searching
for it at first hand...
Plu 10.313 13 [Plutarch] cites...the memorable words of
Antigone, in
Sophocles, concerning the moral sentiment:-For neither now nor
yesterday began/ These thoughts, which have been ever, nor yet can/ A
man
be found who their first entrance knew./
LLNE 10.330 20 [Everett] made us for the first time
acquainted with Wolff'
s theory of the Homeric writings...
LLNE 10.335 4 ...works of genius in their first and
slightest form are still
wholes.
LLNE 10.335 18 ...[Everett] made a beginning of popular
literary and
miscellaneous lecturing, which in that region at least had important
results. It is...becoming a national institution. I am quite certain
that this purely
literary influence was of the first importance to the American mind.
LLNE 10.337 6 ...there was, in the first quarter of our
nineteenth century, a
certain sharpness of criticism...
LLNE 10.339 11 I attribute much importance to two
papers of Dr. Channing, one on Milton and one on Napoleon, which were
the first
specimens in this country of that large criticism which in England had
given power and fame to the Edinburgh Review.
LLNE 10.341 2 [Channing] found [at Warren's house] a
well-chosen
assembly of gentlemen variously distinguished;...they were...drawing
gently towards their great expectation, when a side-door opened, the
whole
company streamed in to an oyster supper...and so ended the first
attempt to
establish aesthetic society in Boston.
LLNE 10.355 8 ...like the dreams of poetic people on
the first outbreak of
the old French Revolution, so [the Fourierist community] would
disappear
in a slime of mire and blood.
LLNE 10.364 20 There is agreement in the testimony that
[Brook Farm] was...to many, the most important period of their
life...their first
acquaintance with the riches of conversation...
EzRy 10.381 10 The father [Noah Ripley] was born at
Hingham [Connecticut], on the farm purchased by his ancestor, William
Ripley, of
England, at the first settlement of the town;...
MMEm 10.409 25 ...I [Mary Moody Emerson] have gone on
my queer way
with joy, saying, Shall the clay interrogate? But in every actual case,
't is
hard, and we lose sight of the first necessity...
MMEm 10.415 15 ...I [Nature]...fed thee with my
mallows, on the first
young day of bread failing.
MMEm 10.415 20 ...I [Nature]...fed thee with my
mallows, on the first
young day of bread failing. More, I...from the solitary heart taught
thee to
say, at first womanhood, Alive with God is enough,-'t is rapture.
MMEm 10.419 21 Could I [Mary Moody Emerson] but live
free from
calculation, as in the first half of life...
Thor 10.456 6 It seemed as if [Thoreau's] first
instinct on hearing a
proposition was to controvert it...
Thor 10.460 15 Before the first friendly word had been
spoken for Captain
John Brown, [Thoreau] sent notices to most houses in Concord that he
would speak in a public hall on the condition and character of John
Brown...
Thor 10.464 4 At Mount Washington...Thoreau had a bad
fall, and sprained
his foot. As he was in the act of getting up from his fall, he saw for
the first
time the leaves of the Arnica mollis.
Thor 10.464 25 At first glance [Thoreau] measured his
companion...
Carl 10.491 23 [Young men] wish freedom of the press,
and [Carlyle] thinks the first thing he would do, if he got into
Parliament, would be to
turn out the reporters...
Carl 10.493 24 The literary, the fashionable, the
political man...comes
eagerly to see this man [Carlyle], whose fun they have heartily
enjoyed, sure of a welcome, and are struck with despair at the first
onset.
GSt 10.502 20 For the relief of Kansas, in 1856-57,
[George Stearns's] own
contributions were the largest and the first.
GSt 10.503 1 [George Stearns's] first donations were
only entering-wedges
of his later;...
GSt 10.503 8 In 1862, on the President's first or
preliminary Proclamation
of Emancipation, [George Stearns] took the first steps for organizing
the
Freedman's Bureau...
GSt 10.503 10 In 1862, on the President's first or
preliminary Proclamation
of Emancipation, [George Stearns] took the first steps for organizing
the
Freedman's Bureau...
LS 11.14 2 The end which [St. Paul] has in view, in the
eleventh chapter of
the first Epistle [to the Corinthians], is not to enjoin upon his
friends to
observe the [Lord's] Supper, but to censure their abuse of it.
LS 11.15 20 We arrive, then, at this conclusion: first,
that it does not appear
from a careful examination of the account of the Last Supper in the
Evangelists, that it was designed by Jesus to be perpetual;...
LS 11.21 5 ...if miracles may be said to have been
[Christianity's] evidence
to the first Christians, they are not its evidence to us, but the
doctrines
themselves;...
HDC 11.29 8 You have thought it becoming to commemorate
the planting
of the first inland town [Concord].
HDC 11.30 14 Here are still around me the lineal
descendants of the first
settlers of this town [Concord].
HDC 11.30 19 Here are still around me the lineal
descendants of the first
settlers of this town [Concord]. Here is Blood...Miles,-the names of
the
inhabitants for the first thirty years;...
HDC 11.34 1 [The pilgrims'] first temporary
accommodation was rude
enough.
HDC 11.34 3 After [the pilgrims] have found a place of
abode, they burrow
themselves in the earth for their first shelter...
HDC 11.34 19 [Food the pilgrims] attain with sore
travail, every one that
can lift a hoe to strike into the earth...tearing up the roots and
bushes from
the ground, which, the first year, yielded them a lean crop...
HDC 11.35 16 The hardships of the journey and of the
first encampment
are certainly related by [the pilgrims'] contemporary with some air of
romance...
HDC 11.38 17 [The Puritans] proceeded to build, under
the shelter of the
hill that extends for a mile along the north side of the Boston road,
their
first dwellings.
HDC 11.40 21 ...as we are informed, the edge of [the
settlers of Concord's] appetite was greater to spiritual duties at
their first coming, in time of
wants, than afterwards.
HDC 11.40 23 The original [Concord] Town Records, for
the first thirty
years, are lost.
HDC 11.41 7 ...it appears from a petition of some
newcomers, in 1643, that
a part [of the land in Concord] had been divided among the first
settlers
without price...
HDC 11.41 11 ...in the first years [of Concord], the
land would not pay the
necessary public charges...
HDC 11.41 25 The first record [of Concord] now
remaining is that of a
reservation of land for the minister...
HDC 11.42 11 ...this first recorded political act of
our fathers, this tax
assessed on its inhabitants by a town, is the most important event in
their
civil history...
HDC 11.43 7 ...the Company [of Massachusetts Bay]
removed to New
England; more than one hundred freemen were admitted the first year...
HDC 11.43 26 The nature of man and his condition in the
world, for the
first time within the period of certain history, controlled the
formation of
the State [in Massachusetts].
HDC 11.45 11 [The settlers of Concord] bore to John
Winthrop, the
Governor, a grave but hearty kindness. For the first time, men examined
the
powers of the chief whom they loved and revered.
HDC 11.45 13 [The settlers of Concord] bore to John
Winthrop, the
Governor, a grave but hearty kindness. For the first time, men examined
the
powers of the chief whom they loved and revered. For the first time,
the
ideal social compact was real.
HDC 11.51 19 John Eliot, in October, 1646, preached his
first sermon in
the Indian language at Noonantum;...
HDC 11.54 23 In 1639, our first selectmen [from
Concord]...were
appointed.
HDC 11.59 13 ...[the red man] may fire a farm-house, or
a village; but...in
the first blast of [the white men's] trumpet we already hear the
flourish of
victory.
HDC 11.68 16 ...We cannot possibly view with
indifference the...endeavors
of the enemies of this...country, to rob us of those...rights, that we
are
obliged to no power, under heaven, for the enjoyment of; as they are
the
fruit of the heroic enterprises of the first settlers of these American
colonies.
HDC 11.73 1 In these peaceful fields [of Concord], for
the first time since a
hundred years, the drum and alarm-gun were heard...
HDC 11.73 8 In the field where the western abutment of
the old bridge [in
Concord] may still be seen...the first organized resistance was made to
the
British arms.
HDC 11.74 16 ...the British fired one or two shots up
the river (our ancient
friend here, Master Blood, saw the water struck by the first ball);...
HDC 11.74 26 A head-stone and a foot-stone, on this
bank of the river, mark the place where these first victims [of the
American Revolution] lie.
EWI 11.112 7 The scheme of the
Minister...proposed...that on 1st August, 1834, all persons [in the
West Indies] now slaves should be entitled to be
registered as apprenticed laborers...
EWI 11.112 23 ...Be it enacted, that all and every
person who, on the first
August, 1834, shall be holden in slavery within any such British colony
as
aforesaid, shall upon and from and after the said first August, become
and
be to all intents and purposes free...
EWI 11.112 26 ...Be it enacted, that all and every
person who, on the first
August, 1834, shall be holden in slavery within any such British colony
as
aforesaid, shall upon and from and after the said first August, become
and
be to all intents and purposes free...
EWI 11.113 6 ...be it enacted...that from and after the
first August, 1834, slavery shall be and is hereby utterly and forever
abolished and declared
unlawful throughout the British colonies...
EWI 11.115 18 The first of August [1834] came on
Friday, and a release
was proclaimed from all work [in the West Indies] until the next
Monday.
EWI 11.117 3 In June, 1835, the Ministers, Lord
Aberdeen and Sir George
Grey, declared to the Parliament...that now for ten months, from 1st
August, 1834, no injury or violence had been offered to any white [in
the
West Indies]...
EWI 11.120 2 ...the great island of
Jamaica...resolved...to emancipate
absolutely on the 1st August, 1838.
EWI 11.120 5 ...on the 1st August, 1838, the shackles
dropped from every
British slave.
EWI 11.127 22 ...when, in 1789, the first privy council
report of evidence
on the [slave] trade...was presented to the House of Commons, a late
day
being named for the discussion...Mr. Wilberforce, Mr. Pitt, the Prime
Minister, and other gentlemen, took advantage of the postponement to
retire
into the country to read the report.
EWI 11.128 7 For months and years the bill [on
emanicipation in the West
Indies] was debated...by the first citizens of England...
EWI 11.132 23 The Congress...should set on foot the
strictest inquisition to
discover where such persons [freemen of Massachusetts], brought into
slavery by these local [Southern] laws at any time heretofore, may now
be. That first;...
EWI 11.132 27 ...the Union already is at an end when
the first citizen of
Massachusetts is thus outraged.
EWI 11.140 17 In the case of the ship Zong, in 1781,
whose master had
thrown one hundred and thirty-two slaves alive into the sea, to cheat
the
underwriters, the first jury gave a verdict in favor of the master and
owners...
War 11.152 8 ...in the first dawnings of the religious
sentiment, that blends
itself with [savages'] passions...
War 11.155 13 ...whilst this principle [of self-help],
necessarily, is
inwrought into the fabric of every creature, yet it is but one
instinct; and
though a primary one, or we may say the very first, yet the appearance
of
the other instincts immediately modifies and controls this;...
War 11.160 4 For ages...the human race has gone on
under the tyranny...of
this first brutish form of their effort to be men;...
War 11.162 19 In the first place, we answer that we
never make much
account of objections which merely respect the actual state of the
world at
this moment...
War 11.170 5 How is [this new aspiration of the human
mind towards
peace] to pass out of thoughts into things? Not, certainly, in the
first place, in the way of routine and mere forms...
FSLC 11.184 8 What is the use of courts, if...no
judge...recurs to first
principles?
FSLC 11.195 18 ...the crime which the second law [the
Fugitive Slave
Law] ordains is greater than the crime which the first law forbids
under
penalty of the gibbet.
FSLC 11.196 12 The first execution of the [Fugitive
Slave] law, as was
inevitable, was a little hesitating;...
FSLC 11.201 10 Hills and Halletts, servile editors by
the hundred, we
could have spared. But [Webster]...the first man of the North...
FSLC 11.207 5 What shall we do? First, abrogate this
[Fugitive Slave] law;...
FSLN 11.232 17 Events roll...the result is the
enforcing of some of those
first commandments which we heard in the nursery.
FSLN 11.232 19 Events roll...the result is the
enforcing of some of those
first commandments which we heard in the nursery. We never get beyond
our first lesson...
AsSu 11.251 5 When the same reproach [of writing his
speeches] was cast
on the first orator of ancient times by some caviller of his day, he
said, I
should be ashamed to come with one unconsidered word before such an
assembly.
AsSu 11.251 24 I wish that [Charles Sumner] may know
the shudder of
terror which ran through all this community on the first tidings of
this brutal
attack.
AKan 11.258 16 I esteem [governments] only good in the
moment when
they are established. I set the private man first.
AKan 11.258 24 First, the private citizen, then the
primary assembly, and
the government last.
ACiv 11.308 2 Why should not America be capable of a
second stroke for
the well-being of the human race, as eighty or ninety years ago she was
for
the first...
ACiv 11.310 16 [Lincoln's proposal of gradual
abolition] marks the
happiest day in the political year. The American Executive ranges
itself for
the first time on the side of freedom.
EPro 11.320 9 The first condition of success is secured
in putting ourselves
right.
ALin 11.329 23 ...that first despair [at Lincoln's
death] was brief...
ALin 11.330 22 All of us remember...the surprise and
disappointment of
the country at [Lincoln's] first nomination by the convention at
Chicago.
ALin 11.331 16 [Lincoln] offered no shining qualities
at the first
encounter;...
HCom 11.344 14 One mother said, when her son was
offered the command
of the first negro regiment, If he accepts it, I shall be as proud as
if I had
heard that he was shot.
SMC 11.351 13 ...the memories of these martyrs, the
noble names which
yet have gathered only their first fame...will go on clothing this
shaft [the
Concord Monument] with daily beauty and spiritual life.
SMC 11.352 1 The old [Concord] Monument...stands to
signalize the first
Revolution...
SMC 11.355 3 ...cities of men are the first effects of
civilization...
SMC 11.356 16 ...when the Border raids were let loose
on [Kansas] villages, these people...were so beside themselves with
rage, that they
became on the instant the bravest soldiers and the most determined
avengers. And the first events of the war of the Rebellion gave the
like
training to the new recruits.
SMC 11.357 10 I have a note of a conversation that
occurred in our first
company, the morning before the battle of Bull Run.
SMC 11.358 10 None of us can have forgotten how sharp a
test to try our
peaceful people with, was the first call for troops [in the Civil War].
SMC 11.358 22 Our first company was led by an officer
who had grown up
in this village from a boy.
SMC 11.360 22 After the first marches [in the Civil
War] there is no letter-paper, there are no envelopes, no
postage-stamps...
SMC 11.361 25 [George Prescott] never remits his care
of the men, aiming
to hold them to their good habits and to keep them cheerful. For the
first
point, he keeps up a constant acquaintance with them;...
SMC 11.372 9 We [Thirty-second Regiment] have been in
the first line
twenty-six days...
SMC 11.372 22 June fourth is marked in [George
Prescott's] diary as An
awful day;-two hundred men lost to the command; and not until the fifth
of June comes at last a respite for a short space, during which...the
officers
were able to send to the wagons and procure a change of clothes, for
the
first time in five weeks.
SMC 11.373 23 On the first of January, 1865, the
Thirty-second Regiment
made itself comfortable in log huts...
SMC 11.374 7 On the first of April, the [Thirty-second]
regiment
connected with Sheridan's cavalry...
SMC 11.374 21 ...the [Thirty-second] regiment was
mustered out in the
field, at Washington, on the twenty-eighth of June, and arrived in
Boston on
the first of July.
EdAd 11.388 21 In hours when it seemed only to need one
just word from
a man of honor...to have given a true direction to the first steps of a
nation, we have seen the best understandings of New England...say, We
are too old
to stand for what is called a New England sentiment any longer.
EdAd 11.391 7 ...the current year has witnessed the
appearance, in their
first English translation, of [Swedenborg's] manuscripts.
Wom 11.405 18 ...according to the rule, take [women's]
first advice, not
the second...
Wom 11.406 22 ...any remarkable opinion or movement
shared by woman
will be the first sign of revolution.
Wom 11.411 13 There is...no style adopted into the
etiquette of courts, but
was first the whim and the mere action of some brilliant woman...
Wom 11.413 23 The first thing men think of, when they
love, is to exhibit
their usefulness and advantages to the object of their affection.
Wom 11.414 3 ...women know, at first sight, the
characters of those with
whom they converse.
Wom 11.421 12 Here are two or three objections [to
women's voting]: first, a want of practical wisdom; second, a too
purely ideal view; and, third, the
danger of contamination.
RBur 11.439 13 At the first announcement...that the
25th of January [1859] was the hundredth anniversary of the birth of
Robert Burns, a sudden
consent warmed the great English race...to keep the festival.
Shak1 11.448 8 Wherever there are men, and in the
degree in which they
are civil...[Shakespeare] has risen to his place as the first poet of
the world.
Humb 11.459 5 ...we have lived to see now, for the
second time in the
history of Prussia, a statesman of the first class [Humboldt]...
FRO1 11.480 13 What is best in the ancient religions
was the sacred
friendships between heroes, the Sacred Bands, and the relations of the
Pythagorean disciples. Our Masonic institutions probably grew from the
like origin. The close association which bound the first disciples of
Jesus is
another example;...
FRO1 11.480 16 The soul of our late war...was, first,
the desire to abolish
slavery in this country...
FRO2 11.486 3 ...I am ready to give...the first simple
foundation of my
belief...
CPL 11.494 4 The bishop of Cavaillon, Petrarch's
friend, in a playful
experiment locked up the poet's library...but the poet's misery caused
him
to restore the key on the first evening.
CPL 11.497 13 The sedge Papyrus...is of more importance
to history than
cotton, or silver, or gold. Its first use for writing is between three
and four
thousand years old...
CPL 11.498 23 Peter Bulkeley sent his son John to the
first class that
graduated at Harvard College in 1642...
CPL 11.499 3 ...Concord counted fourteen graduates of
Harvard in its first
century...
CPL 11.506 2 ...[Kepler] writes, It is now eighteen
months since I got the
first glimpse of light...
CPL 11.507 7 ...the book is a sure friend, always ready
at your first leisure...
CPL 11.507 8 ...the book is a sure friend...opens to
the very page you
desire, and shuts at your first fatigue...
FRep 11.518 16 No [legislative] measure is attempted
for itself, but the
opinion of the people is courted in the first place...
FRep 11.518 19 We do not choose our own candidate, no,
nor any other
man's first choice...
FRep 11.532 26 Young men at thirty and even
earlier...if they fail in their
first enterprise throw up the game.
FRep 11.533 10 If a temperate wise man should look over
our American
society, I think the first danger that would excite his alarm would be
the
European influences on this country.
PLT 12.18 4 [Thoughts or intellections] again all mimic
in their sphericity
the first mind...
PLT 12.25 6 In the orchard many trees send out a
moderate shoot in the
first summer heat, and stop.
PLT 12.25 24 All great masters are chiefly
distinguished by the power of
adding a second, a third, and perhaps a fourth step in a continuous
line. Many a man had taken the first step.
PLT 12.25 26 All great masters are chiefly
distinguished by the power of
adding a second, a third, and perhaps a fourth step in a continuous
line. Many a man had taken the first step. With every additional step
you
enchance immensely the value of your first.
PLT 12.35 17 The old Hindoo Gautama says, Like the
approach of the iron
to the loadstone is the approach of the new-born child to the breast.
There is
somewhat awful in that first approach.
PLT 12.38 24 This is the first property of the
Intellect I am to point out; the
mind detaches.
PLT 12.41 9 The first fact is the fate in every mental
perception,-that my
seeing this or that, and that I see it so or so, is as much a fact in
the natural
history of the world as is the freezing of water at thirty-two degrees
of
Fahrenheit.
PLT 12.50 7 One would say [Shakespeare] must have been
a thousand
years old when he wrote his first line...
PLT 12.61 20 If the first rule is to obey your genius,
in the second place the
good mind is known by the choice of what is positive...
II 12.66 2 'T is very certain that a man's whole
possibility is contained in
that habitual first look which he casts on all objects.
II 12.73 27 Here is a famous Ode, which is the first
performance of the
British mind and lies in all memories as the high-water mark in the
flood of
thought in this age. What does the writer know of that?
Mem 12.94 5 You say the first words of the old song,
and I finish the line
and stanza.
Mem 12.106 25 He is a skilful doctor who can give me a
recipe for the cure
of a bad memory. And yet we have some hints from experience on this
subject. And first, health.
CL 12.140 20 So exquisite is the structure of the
cortical glands, said the
old physiologist Malpighi, that when the atmosphere is ever so slightly
vitiated or altered, the brain is the first part to sympathize...
CL 12.140 27 The power of the air was the first
explanation offered by the
early philosophers of the mutual understanding that men have.
CL 12.151 1 The mallows the Greeks held sacred as
giving the first sign of
the sympathy of the earth with the celestial influences.
CL 12.151 5 The next day the Hylas were piping in every
pool, and a new
activity among the hardy birds...and the first northward flight of the
geese...
CL 12.151 27 The world has nothing to offer more rich
or entertaining than
the days which October always brings us, when, after the first frosts,
a
steady shower of gold falls in the strong south wind from the
chestnuts, maples and hickories;...
CL 12.160 20 The earthquake is the first chemist,
goldsmith and brazier...
CL 12.166 10 [Man] can dispose in his thought of more
worlds, just as
readily as of few, or one. It is his relation to one, to the first,
that imports.
Bost 12.190 13 ...Dr. Mather writes of
[Boston]...within a few years after
the first settlement it grew to be the metropolis of the whole English
America.
Bost 12.191 1 In our beautiful [Boston] bay...a good
boatman can easily
find his way for the first time to the State House...
Bost 12.191 14 ...the next colony planted itself at
Salem, and the next at
Weymouth; another at Medford; before these men, instead of jumping on
to
the first land that offered, wisely judged that the best point for a
city was at
the bottom of a deep and islanded bay...
Bost 12.195 8 I trace to this deep religious sentiment
and to its culture great
and salutary results to the people of New England; first, namely, the
culture
of the intellect...
Bost 12.203 19 ...there is always [in Boston]...always
a heresiarch, whom
the governor and deputies labor with but cannot silence. Some new
light... some champion of first principles of humanity against the rich
and
luxurious;...
Bost 12.207 2 From...Ann Hutchinson, and Whitfield, and
Mother Ann, the
first Shaker, down to Abner Kneeland...there never was wanting [in
Boston] some thorn of dissent and innovation and heresy to prick the
sides of
conservatism.
Bost 12.210 1 As long as [Boston] cleaves to her
liberty, her education and
to her spiritual faith as the foundation of [material accumulations],
she will
teach the teachers and rule the rulers of America. Her mechanics, her
farmers will toil better;...her troops will be the first in the field
to vindicate
the majesty of a free nation, and remain last on the field to secure
it.
MAng1 12.218 20 In the first place, all men have an
organization
corresponding more or less to the entire system of Nature...
MAng1 12.220 13 Michael Angelo dedicated himself...to a
toilsome
observation of Nature. The first anecdote recorded of him shows him to
be
already on the right road.
MAng1 12.224 12 On the 24th of October, 1529, the
Prince of Orange, general of Charles V., encamped on the hills
surrounding the city [Florence], and his first operation was to throw
up a rampart to storm the
bastion of San Miniato.
MAng1 12.233 26 ...as, in the first place,
[Michelangelo] sought to
approach the Beautiful by the study of the True, so he failed not to
make
the next step of progress, and to seek Beauty in its highest form, that
of
Goodness.
MAng1 12.239 9 [Michelangelo] said of his predecessor,
the architect
Bramante, that he laid the first stone of Saint Peter's, clear,
insulated, luminous, with fit design for a vast structure.
Milt1 12.265 25 There is a forbearance even in
[Milton's] polemics. He
opens the war and strikes the first blow.
Milt1 12.268 13 For the first time since many ages, the
invocations of the
Eternal Spirit in the commencement of [Milton's] books are not poetic
forms, but are thoughts...
Milt1 12.274 3 Was there not a fitness in the
undertaking of such a person [as Milton] to write a poem on the subject
of Adam, the first man?
ACri 12.289 17 The Devil in philosophy is absolute
negation...in the
popular mind, the Devil is a malignant person. Yet all our speech
expresses
the first sense.
ACri 12.289 25 Goethe, who had collected all the
diabolical hints in men
and nature for traits for his Walpurgis Nacht, continued the humor of
collecting such horrors after this first occasion had passed...
ACri 12.294 17 ...Shakspeare must have been a thousand
years old when he
wrote his first piece;...
ACri 12.301 15 [The founder of New City] had
transferred to that city [Chicago] the magnificent dreams which he had
once communicated to me, and no longer remembered his first emporium.
MLit 12.311 16 In the first place [the Present Age] has
all books.
MLit 12.311 22 Our presses groan every year with new
editions of all the
select pieces of the first of mankind...
MLit 12.312 3 If we should designate favorite studies
in which the age
delights more than in the rest of this great mass of the permanent
literature
of the human race, one or two instances would be conspicuous. First;
the
prodigious growth and influence of the genius of Shakspeare...
MLit 12.312 6 ...the prodigious growth and influence of
the genius of
Shakspeare, in the last one hundred and fifty years, is itself a fact
of the
first importance.
MLit 12.313 11 [Subjectiveness] is founded on...the
need to recognize one
nature in all the variety of objects, which always characterizes a
genius of
the first order.
MLit 12.314 13 Nor is the distinction between these two
habits [of
subjectiveness] to be found in the circumstance of using the first
person
singular...
WSL 12.346 14 [Landor] was one of the first to
pronounce Wordsworth the
great poet of the age...
Pray 12.352 3 ...what led us to these remembrances [of
prayers] was the
happy accident which in this undevout age lately brought us acquainted
with two or three diaries, which attest...the eternity of the sentiment
and its
equality to itself through all the variety of expression. The first is
the prayer
of a deaf and dumb boy...
AgMs 12.360 11 The First Report, [Edmund Hosmer] said,
is better than
the last, as I observe the first sermon of a minister is often his
best...
EurB 12.375 1 ...the obvious division of modern romance
is into two kinds: first, the novels of costume or of circumstance...
PPr 12.379 4 In its first aspect [Carlyle's Past and
Present] is a political
tract...
PPr 12.390 9 Carlyle is the first domestication of the
modern system, with
its infinity of details, into style.
PPr 12.390 16 Carlyle's style is the first emergence of
all this wealth and
labor with which the world has gone with child so long.
PPr 12.390 23 Carlyle's style is the first emergence of
all this wealth and
labor with which the world has gone with child so long. London and
Europe...and America...have never before been conquered in literature.
This
is the first invasion and conquest.
PPr 12.390 27 [Carlyle's style] is the first
experiment, and something of
rudeness and haste must be pardoned to so great an achievement.
Let 12.392 13 ...first, in regard to the writer who has
given us his
speculations on Railroads and Air-roads, our correspondent shall have
his
own way.
Let 12.392 17 To the railway, we must say,-like the
courageous lord
mayor at his first hunting, when told the hare was coming,-Let it come,
in
Heaven's name, I am not afraid on 't.
Trag 12.406 13 Men and women at thirty years, and even
earlier...if they
fail in their first enterprises, they throw up the game.
First, adj. (3)
EWI 11.120 13 The First of August, 1838, was observed in
Jamaica as a
day of thanksgiving and prayer.
EWI 11.140 8 The First of August [1834] marks the
entrance of a new
element into modern politics, namely, the civilization of the negro.
EWI 11.147 25 The sentiment of Right...pronounces
Freedom. The Power
that built this fabric of things...in the history of the First of
August [1834], has made a sign to the ages, of his will.
first, adv. (142)
Nat 1.33 22 ...Long-lived trees make roots first;...
AmS 1.108 10 First, one, then another, we drain all
cisterns...
DSA 1.125 13 Through [the sentiment of virtue], the
soul first knows itself.
DSA 1.146 7 Look to it first and only, that fashion,
custom...are nothing to
you...
LE 1.155 10 ...I am not less glad or sanguine at the
meeting of scholars, than when, a boy, I first saw the graduates of my
own College assembled at
their anniversary.
LE 1.181 3 [The scholar] is a revealer of things. Let
him first learn the
things.
MR 1.244 15 ...we are first thoughtless, and then find
that we are
moneyless.
MR 1.244 17 We are first sensual, and then must be
rich.
LT 1.259 6 To appear in these aspects, [the present
aspects of our social
state] must first exist...
Tran 1.329 8 The light...falls on a great variety of
objects, and by so falling
is first revealed to us, not in its own form...but in theirs;...
Hist 2.17 1 I knew a draughtsman employed in a public
survey who found
that he could not sketch the rocks until their geological structure was
first
explained to him.
SR 2.64 16 We first share the life by which things
exist...
SR 2.81 14 I have no churlish objection to the
circumnavigation of the
globe...so that the man is first domesticated...
Comp 2.102 27 Every act rewards itself...in a twofold
manner; first in the
thing, or in real nature; and secondly in the circumstance, or in
apparent
nature.
Comp 2.113 10 ...first or last you must pay your entire
debt.
Lov1 2.180 8 The god or hero of the sculptor is always
represented in a
transition from that which is representable to the senses, to that
which is
not. Then first it ceases to be a stone.
Lov1 2.180 16 ...personal beauty is then first charming
and itself when it
dissatisfies us with any end;...
Lov1 2.183 23 The rays of the soul alight first on
things nearest...
Lov1 2.184 17 The work of vegetation begins first in
the irritability of the
bark and leaf-buds.
Fdsp 2.202 13 There are two elements that go to the
composition of
friendship, each so sovereign that I can detect...no reason why either
should
be first named.
Prd1 2.237 17 The Latin proverb says, In battles the
eye is first overcome.
OS 2.273 14 Is the teaching of Christ less effective
now than it was when
first his mouth was opened?
OS 2.274 24 The growths of genius are of a certain
total character, that
does not advance the elect individual first over John, then Adam, then
Richard...
Cir 2.309 17 We learn first to play with [idealism]
academically...
Cir 2.316 8 ...that second man...asks himself Which
debt must I pay first, the debt to the rich, or the debt to the
poor?...
Int 2.330 2 You have first an instinct, then an
opinion, then a knowledge...
Int 2.335 26 The relation between [a thought] and you
first makes you, the
value of you, apparent to me.
Art1 2.367 4 The art that thus separates is itself
first separated.
Mrs1 3.124 1 In a good lord there must first be a good
animal...
Nat2 3.194 20 ...if, instead of identifying ourselves
with the work, we feel
that the soul of the Workman streams through us, we shall find the
peace of
the morning dwelling first in our hearts...
NR 3.226 1 ...on seeing the smallest arc we complete
the curve, and when
the curtain is lifted from the diagram which it seemed to veil, we are
vexed
to find that no more was drawn than just that fragment of an arc which
we
first beheld.
UGM 4.5 19 I can say to you what I cannot first say to
myself.
UGM 4.8 20 Men are...representative; first, of things,
and secondly, of
ideas.
PPh 4.62 8 ...the Asia in [Plato's] mind was first
heartily honored...
PPh 4.65 25 [Plato] said, Culture; but he first
admitted its basis, and gave
immeasurably the first place to advantages of nature.
PNR 4.86 23 ...[Plato's] forerunners had mapped out
each a farm or a
district or an island, in intellectual geography, but...Plato first
drew the
sphere.
SwM 4.102 12 It seems that [Swedenborg] anticipated
much science of the
nineteenth century;...and first demonstrated the office of the lungs.
SwM 4.117 10 Swedenborg first put the fact [of
Correspondence] into a
detached and scientific statement...
MoS 4.151 5 Picture, statue, temple, railroad,
steam-engine, existed first in
an artist's mind...
ShP 4.193 11 Here [in the Elizabethan drama] is...a
shelf full of English
history...and a string of doleful tragedies, merry Italian tales and
Spanish
voyages, which all the London 'prentices know. All the mass has been
treated, with more or less skill, by every playwright, and the prompter
has
the soiled and tattered manuscripts. It is now no longer possible to
say who
wrote them first.
ShP 4.215 6 The finest poetry was first experience;...
GoW 4.263 1 [The writer] believes that all that can be
thought can be
written, first or last;...
ET4 5.47 3 In race, it is not the broad shoulders, or
litheness, or stature that
give advantage, but a symmetry that reaches as far as to the wit. Then
the
miracle and renown begin. Then first we care to examine the pedigree...
ET5 5.86 1 ...Wellington, when he came to the army in
Spain, had every
man weighed, first with accoutrements, and then without;...
ET6 5.102 9 On the day of my arrival at Liverpool, a
gentleman, in
describing to me the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, happened to say, Lord
Clarendon has pluck like a cock and will fight till he dies; and what I
heard
first I heard last...
ET6 5.110 21 [The English] have difficulty in bringing
their reason to act, and on all occasions use their memory first.
ET8 5.138 22 Our swifter Americans, when they first
deal with English, pronounce them stupid;...
ET13 5.230 21 Where dwells the religion [of England]?
Tell me first where
dwells electricity...
ET15 5.264 11 [The London Times] first denounced and
then adopted the
new French Empire...
ET15 5.264 25 [The London Times] will kill all but that
paper which is
diametrically in opposition; since many papers, first and last, have
lived by
their attacks on the leading journal.
ET16 5.288 7 As I had thus taken in the conversation
the saint's part, when
dinner was announced, Carlyle refused to go out before me,--he was
altogether too wicked. I planted my back against the wall, and our host
[Arthur Helps] wittily rescued us from the dilemma, by saying he was
the
wickedest and would walk out first, then Carlyle followed, and I went
last.
ET17 5.296 17 ...in [Wordsworth's] early house-keeping
at the cottage
where he first lived, he was accustomed to offer his friends bread and
plainest fare;...
F 6.44 16 Certain ideas are in the air. We are...all
impressionable, but some
more than others, and these first express them.
F 6.44 19 The truth is in the air, and the most
impressionable brain will
announce it first...
F 6.45 23 Such an one [a strong, astringent, billious
nature] has curculios, borers, knife-worms; a swindler ate him first...
F 6.46 15 ...what their companion prepares to say to
[some people], they
first say to him;...
Pow 6.56 16 One man...is in sympathy with the course of
things; can
predict it. Whatever befalls, befalls him first;...
Pow 6.63 19 Men expect from good whigs put into office
by the
respectability of the country, much less skill to deal with
Mexico...than
from some strong transgressor, like Jefferson or Jackson, who first
conquers his own government and then uses the same genius to conquer
the
foreigner.
Pow 6.73 3 Michel [Angelo] was wont to draw his figures
first in skeleton...
Wth 6.88 3 First [nature] requires that each man should
feed himself.
Wth 6.110 6 Britain, France and Germany...send out,
attracted by the fame
of our advantages, first their thousands, then their millions of poor
people, to share the crop.
Ctr 6.145 12 All educated Americans, first or last, go
to Europe;...
Ctr 6.148 13 ...let [a man's] own genius be what it
may, it will repel quite
as much of agreeable and valuable talent as it draws, and, in a city,
the total
attraction of all the citizens is sure to conquer, first or last, every
repulsion...
CbW 6.243 3 Say not, the chiefs who first arrive/ Usurp
the seats for which
all strive;/...
Ill 6.308 8 When thou dost return/ .../ Beholding.../
...out of endeavor/ To
change and to flow,/ The gas become solid,/ And phantoms and nothings/
Return to be things,/ And endless imbroglio/ Is law and the
world,--/Then
first shalt thou know,/ That in the wild turmoil,/ Horsed on the
Proteus,/ Thou ridest to power,/ And to endurance./
Ill 6.316 8 ...this especial trap [marriage] is laid to
trip up our feet with, and
all are tripped up first or last.
SS 7.12 9 ...if we recall the rare hours when we
encountered the best
persons, we then found ourselves, and then first society seemed to
exist.
Elo1 7.81 23 ...when [personal ascendency] is weaponed
with a power of
speech, it seems first to become truly human...
Elo1 7.90 14 A popular assembly...is commanded by these
two powers,-- first by a fact, then by skill of statement.
Elo1 7.93 19 This terrible earnestness [of the eloquent
man] makes good
the ancient superstition of the hunter, that the bullet will hit its
mark, which
is first dipped in the marksman's blood.
DL 7.104 12 ...presently begins his use of his fingers,
and [the nestler] studies power, the lesson of his race. First it
appears in no great harm...
DL 7.107 14 If a man wishes to acquaint himself...with
the spirit of the age, he must not go first to the state-house or the
court-room.
DL 7.108 25 The history of your fortunes is written
first in your life.
WD 7.184 26 Mars shook the lots in his helmet, and that
of Apollo leaped
out first.
Boks 7.194 25 Dr. Johnson said: Whilst you stand
deliberating which book
your son shall read first, another boy has read both...
Boks 7.196 14 ...the scholar knows that the famed books
contain, first and
last, the best thoughts and facts.
Boks 7.199 21 Plutarch cannot be spared from the
smallest library; first
because he is so readable...
Boks 7.202 7 The secret of the recent histories in
German and in English is
the discovery, owed first to Wolff and later to Boeckh, that the
sincere
Greek history of that period [Age of Pericles] must be drawn from
Demosthenes...and from the comic poets.
Clbs 7.230 8 Every metaphysician must have
observed...that...thoughts
commonly go in pairs; though the related thoughts first appeared in his
mind at long distances of time.
Cour 7.262 12 Lieutenant Ball...whispered, Courage, my
dear boy! you
will recover in a minute or so; I was just the same when I first went
out in
this way.
Suc 7.286 23 For success, to be sure we esteem it a
test in other people, since we do first in ourselves.
Suc 7.299 16 Is...the college where you first knew the
dreams of fancy and
joys of thought, only boards or brick and mortar?
PI 8.4 10 First innuendoes, then broad hints, then
smart taps are given, suggesting that nothing stands still in Nature
but death;...
PI 8.21 26 Poetry must first be good sense, though it
is something better.
PI 8.22 11 Charles James Fox thought...that men first
found out they had
minds, by making and tasting poetry.
Elo2 8.126 13 ...all these are the gymnastics, the
education of eloquence, and not itself. They cannot be too much
considered and practised as
preparation, but the powers are those I first named.
Comc 8.172 17 Timur ceased weeping, but Chodscha ceased
not, but began
now first to weep amain...
QO 8.183 11 Thirty years ago...you might often hear
cited as Mr. Webster'
s three rules: first, never to do to-day what he could defer till
to-morrow;...
QO 8.183 20 ...we find in Grimm's Memoires that
Sheridan got [his rules] from the witty D'Argenson; who, no doubt, if
we could consult him, could
tell of whom he first heard them told.
PPo 8.253 12 No one has unvailed thoughts like Hafiz,
since the locks of
the World-bride were first curled.
Dem1 10.10 15 ...under every tree in the speckled
sunshine and shade no
man notices that every spot of light is a perfect image of the sun,
until in
some hour the moon eclipses the luminary; and then first we notice that
the
spots of light have become crescents...
PerF 10.76 11 ...first or last [man] exhausts by his
use all the harvests...
Prch 10.217 2 In the history of opinion, the pinch of
falsehood shows itself
first...in insincerity, indifference and abandonment of the Church...
MoL 10.243 3 America at large exhibited such a
confusion as California
showed in 1849, when the cry of gold was first raised.
MoL 10.249 21 As certainly as water falls in rain on
the tops of mountains
and runs down into valleys, plains and pits, so does thought fall first
on the
best minds, and run down...
Schr 10.263 7 ...a true talent delights the possessor
first.
Schr 10.285 17 ...[Genius]...flings itself on real
elemental things...which
first subsist, and then resist unweariably forevermore all that
opposes.
LLNE 10.343 4 I suppose all of [the supposed
conspirators] were surprised
at this rumor of a school or sect, and certainly at the name of
Transcendentalism, given nobody knows by whom, or when it was first
applied.
MMEm 10.403 27 ...certain expressions, when they marked
a memorable
state of mind in [Mary Moody Emerson's] experience, recurred to her
afterwards, and she would vindicate herself as having said to Dr.
Ripley or
Uncle Lincoln [Ripley] so and so, at such a period of her life. But
they were
intensely true when first spoken.
MMEm 10.405 12 ...on her arrival at any new home [Mary
Moody
Emerson] was likely to steer first to the minister's house and pray his
wife
to take a boarder;...
Carl 10.491 1 Forster of Rawdon described to me a
dinner at the table d'
hote of some provincial hotel where he carried Carlyle, and where an
Irish
canon had uttered something. Carlyle began to talk, first to the
waiters, and
then to the walls...in a manner that frightened the whole company.
GSt 10.504 3 ...[George Stearns's] plain good sense,
courage, adherence, and his romantic generosity disarmed, first or
last, all gainsayers.
HDC 11.44 16 As early as 1633, the office of townsman
or selectman
appears [in New England], who seems first to have been appointed by the
General Court...
HDC 11.50 14 ...this design [the conversion of the
Indians] is named first
in the printed Considerations, that inclined Hampden, and determined
Winthrop and his friends, to come hither [to New England].
HDC 11.73 10 There [at the Concord bridge] the
Americans first shed
British blood.
War 11.160 23 Cannot peace be, as well as war? This
thought is...the rising
of the general tide in the human soul,-and rising highest, and first
made
visible, in the most simple and pure souls...
War 11.166 17 ...bayonet and sword must first retreat a
little from their
ostentatious prominence;...
FSLC 11.181 2 The only haste in Boston, after the
rescue of Shadrach, last
February, was, who should first put his name on the list of volunteers
in aid
of the marshal.
FSLC 11.194 9 ...the womb conceives and the breasts
give suck to
thousands and millions of hairy babes formed not in the image of your
statute, but in the image of the Universe;...necessitated to express
first or
last every feeling of the heart.
FSLN 11.243 11 I [Robert Winthrop] give you my word,
not without
regret, that I was first for you;...
AKan 11.258 5 ...the governor and legislature should
neither slumber nor
sleep till they have found out how to send effectual aid and comfort to
these
poor farmers [in Kansas], or else should resign their seats to those
who can. But first let them hang the halls of the state-house with
black crape...
JBS 11.280 7 ...the anecdotes preserved [of John Brown]
show a far-seeing
skill and conduct, which...should secure...an honest reward, first to
the
farmer, and afterwards to the dealer.
SMC 11.352 26 The aim of the hour was to reconstruct
the South; but first
the North had to be reconstructed.
SMC 11.359 13 ...[George Prescott] knew that his men
had found out, first
that he was captain, then that he was colonel...
Wom 11.409 6 It was Burns's remark when he first came
to Edinburgh that
between the men of rustic life and the polite world he observed little
difference;...
Wom 11.415 12 After the deification of Woman in the
Catholic Church, in
the sixteenth or seventeenth century...the Quakers have the honor of
having
first established, in their discipline, the equality of the sexes.
Shak1 11.447 14 ...it is to us [The Saturday Club] a
painful
disappointment...that a well-known and honored compatriot, who first in
Boston wrote elegant verse...Mr. Charles Sprague,-pleads the
infirmities
of age as an absolute bar to his presence with us.
Scot 11.463 17 I can well remember as far back as when
The Lord of the
Isles was first republished in Boston...
ChiE 11.473 19 I am sure that gentlemen around me bear
in mind the bill... requiring that candidates for public offices shall
first pass examinations on
their literary qualifications for the same.
FRep 11.524 1 ...the people] must take wine at the
hotel, first, for the look
of it, and second, for the purpose of sending the bottle to two or
three
gentlemen at the table;...
PLT 12.15 3 First I wish to speak of the excellence of
that element [Intellect]...
PLT 12.19 4 ...presently, antagonized by other thoughts
which [the
perceptions of the soul] first aroused, or by thoughts which are sons
and
daughters of these, the thought buries itself in the new thought of
larger
scope...
PLT 12.25 1 The mind is first only receptive.
PLT 12.29 27 If [a man] could attain full size he would
take up, first or
last, atom by atom, all the world into a new form.
PLT 12.36 19 [Pan]...was not represented by any outward
image; a terror
sometimes, at others a placid omnipotence. Such homage did the Greek...
pay to unscrutable force we call Instinct, or Nature when it first
becomes
intelligent.
CL 12.137 20 In Tornea, [Linnaeus] found the people
suffering every
spring from the loss of their cattle, which died by some frightful
distemper, to the number of fifty or a hundred in a year. Linnaeus
walked out to
examine the meadow into which they were first turned out to grass...
CL 12.144 25 ...'t is a commonplace, which I have
frequently heard spoken
in Illinois, that it was a manifest leading of the Divine Providence
that the
New England states should have been first settled before the Western
country was known, or they would never have been settled at all.
CL 12.164 1 Nature speaks to the imagination; first,
through her grand
style...
CL 12.164 9 Every new perception of the method and
beauty of Nature
gives a new shock of surprise and pleasure; and always for this double
reason: first, because they are so excellent in their primary fact...
Bost 12.204 12 In Massachusetts [Nature] did not want
epic poems and
dramas yet, but first, planters of towns...
MAng1 12.221 12 When Michael Angelo would begin a
statue, he made
first on paper the skeleton;...
MAng1 12.230 7 [Michelangelo's paintings are in the
Sistine Chapel, of
which he first covered the ceiling with the story of the Creation...
MAng1 12.235 6 On the death of San Gallo...Paul III.
first entreated, then
commanded the aged artist [Michelangelo] to assume the charge of this
great work...
MAng1 12.239 7 Michael Angelo said of Masaccio's
pictures that when
they were first painted they must have been alive.
Milt1 12.252 26 We think we have heard the recitation
of [Milton's] verses
by genius which found in them that which itself would say; recitation
which
told, in the diamond sharpness of every articulation, that now first
was such
perception and enjoyment possible;...
Milt1 12.264 27 In like spirit, [Milton] replies to the
suspicious calumny
respecting his morning haunts. Those morning haunts are where they
should be, at home;...up and stirring...in summer, as oft with the bird
that
first rouses, or not much tardier...
MLit 12.310 18 In looking at the library of the Present
Age, we are first
struck with the fact of the immense miscellany.
Pray 12.355 12 ...thou art my Father, and I will love
thee, for thou didst
first love me, and lovest me still.
Pray 12.356 27 Thee [God] when I first knew, thou
liftedst me up that I
might see, there was what I might see, and that I was not yet such as
to see.
EurB 12.367 1 Coleridge excellently said of poetry,
that poetry must first
be good sense;...
EurB 12.367 2 ...a palace might well be magnificent,
but first it must be a
house.
PPr 12.391 4 [Carlyle's style] is the first experiment,
and something of
rudeness and haste must be pardoned to so great an achievement. It will
be
done again and again, sharper, simpler; but fortunate is he who did it
first...
First Book [Wordsworth, Th (1)
MLit 12.321 1 ...the interest of the poem [Wordsworth's
The Excursion] ended almost with the narrative of the influences of
Nature on the mind of
the Boy, in the First Book.
First Cause, n. (7)
Exp 3.72 15 The consciousness in each man is a sliding
scale, which
identifies him now with the First Cause, and now with the flesh of his
body;...
UGM 4.35 3 In the moment when [any genius] ceases to
help us as a cause, he begins to help us more as an effect. Then he
appears as an exponent of a
vaster mind and will. The opaque self becomes transparent with the
light of
the First Cause.
Pow 6.74 21 [Many an artist] is up to nature and the
First Cause in his
thought.
Art2 7.39 11 Relatively to themselves, the bee, the
bird, the beaver, have
no art; for what they do they do instinctively; but relatively to the
Supreme
Being, they have. And the same is true of all unconscious action:
relatively
to the doer, it is instinct, relatively to the First Cause, it is Art.
WD 7.179 24 ...him I reckon the most learned
scholar...who can unfold the
theory of this particular Wednesday. Can he uncover the
ligaments...which
attach the dull men and things we know to the First Cause?
Imtl 8.349 2 ...the man puts off the ignorance and
tumultuous passions of
youth; proceeding thence puts off the egotism of manhood, and becomes
at
last a public and universal soul. He is...rising to realities; the
outer relations
and circumstances dying out, he entering deeper into God, God into him,
until the last garment of egotism falls, and he is with God,-shares the
will
and the immensity of the First Cause.
PLT 12.64 13 [The hints of the Intellect] overcome us
like perfumes from a
far-off shore of sweetness, and their meaning is...that by casting
ourselves
on it and being its voice it rushes each moment to positive
commands...and
ties the will of a child to the love of the First Cause.
First Good, n. (1)
Schr 10.271 21 ...[genius and virtue] are the First
Good...
first, n. (29)
Lov1 2.187 21 ...the purification of the intellect and
the heart from year to
year is the real marriage, foreseen and prepared from the first...
Art1 2.367 19 ...[art] stands in the imagination as
somewhat...struck with
death from the first.
PPh 4.66 17 In the Republic [Plato] insists on the
temperaments of the
youth, as first of the first.
PPo 8.254 26 ...[Hafiz's] claim [as a bard and inspired
man of his people] has been admitted from the first.
LLNE 10.359 26 William Allen was at first and for some
time the head
farmer [at Brook Farm]...
LLNE 10.361 24 George W. Curtis of New York, and his
brother, of
English Oxford, were members of the family [at Brook Farm] from the
first.
LLNE 10.363 22 Rev. William Henry Channing...was from
the first a
student of Socialism in France and England...
CSC 10.376 24 ...not [the Chardon Street Convention's]
least instructive
lesson was the gradual but sure ascendency of [Alcott's] spirit, in
spite of
the incredulity and derision with which he is at first received...
MMEm 10.408 24 [Mary Moody Emerson] writes...My
oddities were
never designed,-effect of an uncalculating constitution, at first...
Thor 10.473 1 [Thoreau] grew to be revered and admired
by his townsmen, who had at first known him only as an oddity.
HDC 11.44 26 In 1635, the [General] Court say...it is
Ordered, that the
freemen of every town shall have power to...choose their own particular
officers. This pointed chiefly at the office of constable, but they
soon chose
their own selectmen, and very early assessed taxes; a power at first
resisted, but speedily confirmed to them.
HDC 11.68 2 From...1765...to the peace of 1783, the
[Concord] Town
Records breathe a resolute and warlike spirit, so bold from the first
as
hardly to admit of increase.
War 11.154 6 [Alexander's conquest of the East] brought
different families
of the human race together,-to blows at first, but afterwards to truce,
to
trade, and to intermarriage.
FSLC 11.188 15 I had thought, I confess, what must come
at last would
come at first, a banding of all men against the authority of this
statute [the
Fugitive Slave Law].
FSLC 11.195 21 ...it is a greater crime to reenslave a
man who has shown
himself fit for freedom, than to enslave him at first, when it might be
pretended to be a mitigation of his lot as a captive in war.
ALin 11.329 16 In this country, on Saturday, every one
was struck dumb, and saw at first only deep below deep, as he meditated
on the ghastly blow [Lincoln's death].
ALin 11.333 13 [Lincoln] is the author of a multitude
of good sayings, so
disguised as pleasantries that it is certain they had no reputation at
first but
as jests;...
SMC 11.367 8 ...though suffering at first some
disadvantage from change
of commanders, and from severe losses, [the Thirty-second Regiment]
grew
at last...to an excellent reputation...
FRep 11.514 5 In our popular politics you may note that
each aspirant who
rises above the crowd, however at first making his obedient
apprenticeship
in party tactics...soon learns that it is by no means by obeying the
vulgar
weathercock of his party...that real power is gained...
FRep 11.525 19 ...the history of Nature from first to
last is incessant
advance from less to more.
PLT 12.6 23 ...if [the student] finds at first with
some alarm how
impossible it is to accept many things which the hot or the mild
sectarian
may insist on his believing, he will be armed by his insight and brave
to
meet all inconvenience and all resistance it may cost him.
PLT 12.23 10 Every scholar knows that he applies
himself coldly and
slowly at first to his task...
PLT 12.43 24 Our thoughts at first possess us.
MAng1 12.235 13 Michael Angelo, who...distrusted his
capacity as an
architect, at first refused [to build St. Peter's] and then reluctantly
complied.
Milt1 12.253 6 The opposition to [a masterpiece of
art], always greatest at
first, continually decreases...
Milt1 12.278 9 ...according to Lord Bacon's definition
of poetry...Poetry... seeks...to create an ideal world better than the
world of experience. Such
certainly is the explanation of Milton's tracts. Such is the apology to
be
entered for the plea for freedom of divorce; an essay, which, from the
first, until now, has brought a degree of obloquy on his name.
MLit 12.320 13 The fame of Wordsworth is a leading fact
in modern
literature, when it is considered how hostile his genius at first
seemed to the
reigning taste...
Pray 12.353 27 I know that sorrow comes not at once
only. We cannot
meet it and say, now it is overcome, but again, and yet again, its
flood pours
over us, and as full as at first.
AgMs 12.360 14 ...every man has one thing which he
specially wishes to
say, and that comes out at first.
First Person, n. (1)
FRO1 11.479 10 ...in the thirteenth century the First
Person began to
appear at the side of his Son, in pictures and in sculpture, for
worship...
First Philosophy, n. (2)
ET14 5.244 14 ...[the English] draw only a bucketful at
the fountain of the
First Philosophy for their occasion, and do not go to the spring-head.
WSL 12.346 23 Only from a mind conversant with the
First Philosophy can
definitions be expected.
First Report, n. (1)
AgMs 12.360 10 The First Report, [Edmund Hosmer] said,
is better than
the last...
first-born, n. (3)
Fdsp 2.202 1 He who offers himself a candidate for that
covenant [of
friendship] comes up, like an Olympian, to the great games where the
first-born
of the world are the competitors.
Fdsp 2.213 21 [By persisting in your path] You...draw
to you the first-born
of the world...
Art2 7.52 3 These [ancient sculptures] are the
countenances of the first-born...
first-class, adj. (4)
ET4 5.69 12 Beef, mutton, wheat-bread and malt-liquors
are universal
among the first-class laborers [in England].
ET8 5.129 6 A Yorkshire mill-owner told me he had
ridden more than once
all the way from London to Leeds, in the first-class carriage, with the
same
persons, and no word exchanged.
Wth 6.109 3 A youth coming into the city from his
native New Hampshire
farm...boards at a first-class hotel...
CbW 6.261 3 The first-class minds...had the poor man's
feeling and
mortification.
first-rate, adj. (3)
ET5 5.93 10 There is no department of literature, of
science, or of useful
art, in which [the English] have not produced a first-rate book.
Aris 10.41 24 In the Norse Edda it appears as the
curious but excellent
policy of contending tribes, when tired of war, to exchange hostages,
and in
reality each to adopt from the other a first-rate man...
AsSu 11.251 1 ...the third crime [Sumner] stands
charged with, is, that his
speeches were written before they were spoken; which, of course, must
be
true in Sumner's case, as it was true...of every first-rate speaker
that ever
lived.
first-rate, adv. (1)
ET2 5.30 19 ...here on the second day of our voyage,
stepped out a little
boy in his shirt-sleeves, who had hid himself whilst the ship was in
port... having no money and wishing to go to England. The sailors have
dressed
him in Guernsey frock...and he...likes the work first-rate...
fir-tree, n. (1)
Exp 3.45 14 ...night hovers all day in the boughs of the
fir-tree.
fish, adj. (1)
PI 8.72 3 One would say of the force in the works of
Nature, all depends on
the battery. If it give one shock, we shall get to the fish form, and
stop;...
fish, n. (37)
Nat 1.67 25 ...we become sensible of a certain occult
recognition and
sympathy in regard to the most unwieldy and eccentric forms of beast,
fish, and insect.
MN 1.212 5 Is [man's work in the world] for use? nature
is debased, as if
one looking at the ocean can remember only the price of fish.
MR 1.239 18 ...instead of...that mighty and prevailing
heart, which the
father had...whom...beast and fish seemed all to know and to serve,-we
have now a puny, protected person...
Hist 2.18 3 ...every spine and tint in the sea-shell
preexists in the secreting
organs of the fish.
Hist 2.36 16 ...the fins of the fish foreshow that
water exists...
Comp 2.101 7 ...the naturalist...regards a horse as a
running man, a fish as a
swimming man...
Pt1 3.12 24 ...I, being myself a novice, am slow in
perceiving that [the
poet]...is merely bent that I should admire his skill to rise like a
fowl or a
flying fish...
PNR 4.80 19 [The human being's] arts and
sciences...look glorious when
prospectively beheld from the distant brain of...fish.
SwM 4.118 17 ...there is no comet...fish...that, for
itself, does not interest
more scholars and classifiers than the meaning and upshot of the frame
of
things.
ShP 4.190 20 [A great man] finds two counties groping
to bring coal, or
flour, or fish, from the place of production to the place of
consumption, and
he hits on a railroad.
ET2 5.26 24 The good ship darts through the water all
day, all night, like a
fish;...
ET3 5.39 8 The rivers [in England] and the surrounding
sea spawn with
fish;...
ET3 5.39 13 ...at one season, the country people [of
England] say, the lakes
contain one part water and two parts fish.
ET11 5.189 9 The Dukes of Athol, Sutherland, Buccleugh
and the Marquis
of Breadalbane have introduced...the artificial replenishment of lakes
and
ponds with fish...
F 6.14 25 Lodged in the parent animal...[the vesicle]
unlocks itself to fish, bird, or quadruped...
F 6.15 21 One leaf [Nature] lays down, a floor of
granite;...a thousand ages, and a layer of marl and mud;...her first
misshapen animals, zoophyte, trilobium, fish;...
F 6.41 19 ...the woolly aphides on the apple perspire
their own bed, and the
fish its shell.
Wth 6.119 9 Now, the farmer buys almost all he
consumes,--tinware, cloth, sugar, tea, coffee, fish, coal, railroad
tickets and newspapers.
Ctr 6.146 1 Do you suppose there is any country where
they do not...broil
the fish?
Ill 6.309 14 [In the Mammoth Cave] I...paddled three
quarters of a mile in
the deep Echo River, whose waters are peopled with the blind fish;...
Elo1 7.71 9 ...every literature contains these high
compliments to the art of
the orator and the bard, from the Hebrew and the Greek down to the
Scottish Glenkindie, who ...harpit a fish out o' saut-water,/ Or water
out of
a stone,/ Or milk out of a maiden's breast/ Who bairn had never none./
PPo 8.241 12 ...when the Queen of Sheba came to visit
Solomon, he had
built...a palace, of which the floor or pavement was of glass, laid
over
running water, in which fish were swimming.
Aris 10.44 4 I think he'll be to Rome/ As is the osprey
to the fish, who
takes it/ By sovereignty of nature./
Edc1 10.148 26 The boy wishes to learn...to catch a
fish in the brook...
Edc1 10.155 12 ...when [the naturalist] goes to the
river-bank, the fish and
the reptile swim away...
Edc1 10.155 17 These creatures [in nature] have no
value for their time, and [the naturalist] must put as low a rate on
his. By dint of obstinate sitting
still, reptile, fish...begin to return.
Supl 10.175 5 In all the years that I have sat in town
and forest, I never
saw...a talking fish...
Thor 10.469 10 [Thoreau] knew how to sit
immovable...until the bird, the
reptile, the fish, which had retired from him, should come back and
resume
its habits...
Thor 10.482 12 The chub is a soft fish, and tastes like
boiled brown paper
salted.
HDC 11.34 24 ...the Lord is pleased to provide for [the
pilgrims] great store
of fish in the spring-time...
HDC 11.55 11 The fish, which had been the abundant
manure of the
settlers, was found to injure the land.
HDC 11.56 20 The people on the [Massachusetts]
bay...found the way to
the West Indies, with pipe-staves, lumber and fish;...
PLT 12.22 6 A fish in like manner is man furnished to
live in the sea;...
Mem 12.97 2 Nature interests [the intellectual man]; a
plant, a fish...in their
own method and law.
CL 12.154 4 ...[the sea] is one vast rolling bed of
life, and every sparkle is a
fish.
Bost 12.192 1 John Smith was stung near to death by the
most poisonous
tail of a fish, called a sting-ray.
MAng1 12.220 19 Granacci, a painter's apprentice,
having lent [Michelangelo], when a boy, a print of Saint Antony beaten
by devils, together with some colors and pencils, he went to the
fish-market to
observe the form and color of fins and of the eyes of fish.
fish, v. (6)
NER 3.257 27 ...it seems as if a man should learn to
plant, or to fish, or to
hunt, that he might secure his subsistence at all events...
ET4 5.58 3 [The heroes of the Norse Sagas] fish in the
fiord and hunt the
deer.
ET4 5.70 24 Every season turns out the [the English]
aristocracy into the
country to shoot and fish.
HDC 11.29 23 ...the little society of men who now, for
a few years, fish in
this river...shortly shall hurry from its banks as did their
forefathers.
PLT 12.22 20 Is it not a little startling to see...with
what genius some
people fish...
Bost 12.199 10 John Smith says, Thirty, forty, or fifty
sail went yearly in
America only to trade and fish...
fished, v. (4)
ET5 5.75 3 ...the Saxon seriously settled in the land
[England], builded, tilled, fished and traded...
ET5 5.91 20 Lord Elgin, at Athens, saw the imminent
ruin of the Greek
remains, set up his scaffoldings...and, after five years' labor to
collect them, got his marbles on ship-board. The ship struck a rock and
went to the
bottom. He had them all fished up by divers...
ET5 5.95 9 The rivers, lakes and ponds [in England],
too much fished, or
obstructed by factories, are artificially filled with the eggs of
salmon, turbot
and herring.
HDC 11.36 10 Tahattawan, the Sachem [of the
Massachusetts Indians]... lived near Nashawtuck, now Lee's Hill. Their
tribe, once numerous, the
epidemic had reduced. Here they planted, hunted and fished.
fisher, n. (1)
MMEm 10.433 6 It is essential to the safety of every
mackerel fisher that
latitudes and longitudes should be astronomically ascertained;...
fisheries, n. (2)
Pt1 3.37 26 Our log-rolling...our fisheries...are yet
unsung.
LLNE 10.362 1 Mr. Ichabod Morton of Plymouth, a plain
man formerly
engaged through many years in the fisheries with success...came and
built a
house on [Brook] farm...
fisherman, n. (5)
Nat 1.42 21 Who can guess how much firmness the
sea-beaten rock has
taught the fisherman?...
Hist 2.40 19 ...what food or experience or succor have
[Olympiads and
Consulates]...for the fisherman, the stevedore, the porter?
Ill 6.311 19 ...the fisherman dripping all day over a
cold pond, the
switchman at the railway intersection...ascribe a certain pleasure to
their
employment, which they themselves give it.
Elo2 8.114 11 ...you may find [the orator] in some
lowly Bethel, by the
seaside, where a hard-featured, scarred and wrinkled Methodist becomes
the poet of the sailor and the fisherman...
Res 8.145 11 The boat is full of water, and resists all
your strength to drag
it ashore and empty it. The fisherman looks about him, puts a round
stick of
wood underneath, and it rolls as on wheels at once.
fishermen, n. (4)
ET2 5.27 2 ...[the good ship] has reached the
Banks;...gulls, haglets, ducks, petrels, swim, dive and hover around;
no fishermen; she has passed the
Banks...
WD 7.176 6 ...in our history, Jesus is born in a barn,
and his twelve peers
are fishermen.
Scot 11.466 7 In his own household and neighbors
[Scott] found characters
and pets of humble class, with whom he established the best relation,-
small farmers and tradesmen, shepherds, fishermen, gypsies...
FRep 11.526 19 In Massachusetts, every twelfth man is a
shoemaker, and
the rest, millers, farmers, sailors, fishermen.
fishermen's, n. (1)
Thor 10.455 21 In his travels, [Thoreau] used the
railroad only to get over
so much country as was unimportant to the present purpose, walking
hundreds of miles...buying a lodging in farmers' and fishermen's
houses...
fishers, n. (1)
HDC 11.28 3 I will have never a noble,/ No lineage
counted great;/ Fishers
and choppers and ploughmen/ Shall constitute a state./
fisher's, n. [fishers',] (4)
WD 7.175 27 In the Norse legend of our ancestors, Odin
dwells in a fisher'
s hut...
PC 8.212 4 That cosmical west wind...is alone broad
enough to carry to
every city and suburb, to...the miner's shanty and the fisher's boat,
the
inspirations of this new hope of mankind.
War 11.166 13 ...the least change in the man will
change his
circumstances;...if, for example, he...should come to feel that every
man
was another self with whom he might come to join, as left hand works
with
right. Every degree of the ascendency of this feeling would cause the
most
striking changes of external things...the cannon would become
street-posts; the pikes, a fisher's harpoon;...
MLit 12.325 3 It was with [Goethe] a favorite task to
find a theory of every
institution, custom, art, work of art, which he observed. Witness his
explanation...of the Venetian music of the gondolier, originating in
the
habit of the fishers' wives of the Lido singing on shore to their
husbands on
the sea;...
fishery, n. (1)
ET5 5.83 27 [The English] apply themselves...to fishery,
to manufacture of
indispensable staples...
fishes, n. (17)
Nat 1.17 6 The long slender bars of cloud float like
fishes in the sea of
crimson light.
Pt1 3.36 17 ...instantly the mind inquires whether
these fishes under the
bridge, yonder oxen in the pasture, those dogs in the yard, are
immutably
fishes, oxen and dogs, or only so appear to me...
Pt1 3.36 19 ...instantly the mind inquires whether
these fishes under the
bridge, yonder oxen in the pasture, those dogs in the yard, are
immutably
fishes, oxen and dogs, or only so appear to me...
UGM 4.19 20 [The great man's] class is extinguished
with him. In some
other and quite different field the next man will appear; not
Jefferson, not
Franklin, but now a great salesman...then a student of fishes...
ET4 5.64 22 From childhood, [the English] dabbled in
water, they swam
like fishes...
Wth 6.98 11 Every man may have occasion to consult
books which he does
not care to possess...pictures also of birds, beasts, fishes, shells,
trees, flowers, whose names he desires to know.
PPo 8.252 21 [Hafiz] says, The fishes shed their
pearls, out of desire and
longing as soon as the ship of Hafiz swims the deep.
Insp 8.270 7 We are very glad that [the aboriginal man]
ate his fishes and
snails and marrow-bones out of our sight and hearing...
Grts 8.305 9 Others find a charm and a profession in
the natural history of
man and the mammalia or related animals; others in ornithology, or
fishes, or insects;...
Edc1 10.155 9 Do you know how the naturalist learns all
the secrets...of
fishes...
Thor 10.466 19 ...the fishes [in the Concord River],
and their spawning and
nests, their manners, their food;...were all known to [Thoreau]...
Thor 10.466 22 ...the shad-flies which fill the air on
a certain evening once
a year, and which are snapped at by the fishes so ravenously that many
of
these die of repletion;...were all known by [Thoreau]...
Thor 10.466 25 ...the conical heaps of small stones on
the river-shallows, the huge nests of small fishes...were all known to
[Thoreau]...
Thor 10.472 6 ...the fishes swam into [Thoreau's] hand,
and he took them
out of the water;...
CL 12.138 26 [Linnaeus]...examined fishes, insects,
birds, quadrupeds;...
CL 12.165 1 Agassiz studies year after year fishes and
fossil anatomy of
saurian, and lizard, and pterodactyl. But whatever he says, we know
very
well what he means.
CW 12.177 1 This is my ideal of the powers of wealth.
Find out what lake
or sea Agassiz wishes to explore, and offer to carry him there, and he
will
make you acquainted with all its fishes...
fishing, adj. (1)
Cour 7.261 6 Tender, amiable boys, who had never
encountered any
rougher play than a...fishing excursion, were suddenly drawn up to face
a
bayonet charge or capture a battery.
fishing, v. (5)
Int 2.334 17 ...our wiser years still run back to the
despised recollections of
childhood, and always we are fishing up some wonderful article out of
that
pond;...
Farm 7.139 3 The lesson one learns in fishing,
yachting, hunting or
planting is the manners of Nature;...
Res 8.150 19 Games, fishing, bowling, hunting,
gymnastics, dancing,--are
not these needful to you?
Edc1 10.140 17 If [a boy] can turn his books to such
picturesque account in
his fishing and hunting, it is easy to see how his reading and
experience... will interpenetrate each other.
CL 12.135 23 The Indians go in summer to the coast, for
fishing;...
fishing-boats, n. (1)
SR 2.86 16 Hudson and Behring accomplished so much in
their fishing-boats
as to astonish Parry and Franklin...
fishing-cobble, n. (1)
RBur 11.442 8 ...the farm-work, the country holiday, the
fishing-cobble are
still [Burns's] debtors to-day.
fishing-craft, n. (1)
DL 7.110 8 Do not ask [the scholar] to...join a company
to build a factory
or a fishing-craft.
fishing-rod, n. (3)
Nat2 3.177 6 A susceptible person does not like to
indulge his tastes in this
kind [in passive nature] without the apology of some trivial
necessity:...he
carries a fowling-piece or a fishing-rod.
Ctr 6.142 24 Archery, cricket, gun and fishing-rod,
horse and boat, are all
educators, liberalizers;...
Ctr 6.144 3 ...the gun, fishing-rod, boat and horse,
constitute, among all
who use them, secret freemasonries.
fishing-rods, n. (1)
Ctr 6.142 20 [Your boy] hates the grammar and Gradus,
and loves guns, fishing-rods, horses and boats.
fishing-smack, n. (1)
EWI 11.131 3 The poorest fishing-smack that floats under
the shadow of
an iceberg in the Northern seas...should be encompassed by
[Massachusetts'
s] laws with comfort and protection...
fish-market, n. (1)
MAng1 12.220 18 Granacci, a painter's apprentice, having
lent [Michelangelo], when a boy, a print of Saint Antony beaten by
devils, together with some colors and pencils, he went to the
fish-market to
observe the form and color of fins and of the eyes of fish.
fishmongers, n. (1)
PPh 4.55 10 ...[Plato] fortified himself by drawing all
his illustrations from
sources disdained by orators and polite conversers;...from...the shops
of... butchers and fishmongers.
fish-ponds, n. (1)
CW 12.173 17 ...nothing in Europe is more elaborately
luxurious than the
costly gardens...with their...fish-ponds, sculptured summer-houses and
grottoes;...
fish's, n. (1)
Con 1.300 18 Each of the convolutions of the
sea-shell...marks one year of
the fish's life;...
fish-worms, n. (1)
WD 7.182 27 [The savant's] performance is a memoir to
the Academy on
fish-worms, tadpoles, or spiders' legs;...
fishy, adj. (1)
F 6.22 16 [Man] betrays his relation to what is below
him...fishy... quadruped ill-disguised...
fissure, n. (1)
Elo2 8.132 10 ...the Andes and Alleghanies indicate the
line of the fissure
in the crust of the earth along which they were lifted...
fist, n. (2)
Res 8.140 25 By his machines man...can knock down cities
with his fist of
gunpowder;...
HCom 11.344 4 When her blood is up, [Massachusetts] has
a fist big
enough to knock down an empire.
fists, n. (3)
ET4 5.63 14 The coster-mongers of London streets hold
cowardice in
loathing:--we must work our fists well;...
ET4 5.63 15 The coster-mongers of London streets hold
cowardice in
loathing...we are all handy with our fists.
Grts 8.314 23 ...one fights with cannon as with
fists;...
fit, adj. (103)
Nat 1.21 7 Does not the New World clothe [Columbus's]
form with her
palm-groves and savannahs as fit drapery?
Nat 1.31 26 Long hereafter...these solemn images shall
reappear in their
morning lustre, as fit symbols and words of the thoughts which the
passing
events shall awaken.
AmS 1.97 11 ...he who has put forth his total strength
in fit actions has the
richest return of wisdom.
MN 1.191 4 The land we live in has no interest so
dear...as the fit
consecration of days of reason and thought.
MN 1.194 7 ...come...hither, thou tender, doubting
heart, which hast not yet
found any place in the world's market fit for thee;...
MR 1.231 5 Has [the young man] genius and virtue? the
less does he find [the employments of commerce] fit for him to grow
in...
Tran 1.347 15 [Transcendentalists] feel that they are
never so fit for
friendship as when they have quitted mankind...
YA 1.368 12 ...the selection of a fit house-lot has the
same advantage over
an indifferent one, as the selection to a given employment of a man who
has
a genius for that work.
Comp 2.119 21 [The mob's] fit hour of activity is
night.
SL 2.139 18 For you there is...a fit place and
congenial duties.
SL 2.144 1 A man's genius...the selection of what is
fit for him...determines
for him the character of the universe.
SL 2.153 18 That statement only is fit to be made
public which you have
come at in attempting to satisfy your own curiosity.
Fdsp 2.206 1 [Friendship] is fit for serene days...
Fdsp 2.209 6 He only is fit for this society [of
friendship] who is
magnanimous;...
Hsm1 2.247 10 Dor. O star of Rome! what gratitude can
speak/ Fit words
to follow such a deed as this?/
Hsm1 2.260 14 If you would serve your brother, because
it is fit for you to
serve him, do not take back your words when you find that prudent
people
do not commend you.
Int 2.334 11 So lies the whole series of natural images
with which your life
has made you acquainted, in your memory, though you know it not; and a
thrill of passion flashes light on their dark chamber, and the active
power
seizes instantly the fit image, as the word of its momentary thought.
Pt1 3.17 13 Thought makes everything fit for use.
Mrs1 3.139 1 The same discrimination of fit and fair
runs out, if with less
rigor, into all parts of life.
Mrs1 3.149 23 I have seen an individual...who shook off
the captivity of
etiquette, with happy, spirited bearing, good-natured and free as Robin
Hood;,--yet with the port of an emperor, if need be,--calm, serious and
fit to
stand the gaze of millions.
Gts 3.159 15 Flowers and fruits are always fit
presents;...
Gts 3.161 24 This is fit for kings, and rich men who
represent kings...to
make presents of gold and silver stuffs, as a kind of symbolical
sin-offering...
Pol1 3.202 16 It seemed fit that Laban and Jacob should
have equal rights
to elect the officer who is to defend their persons...
Pol1 3.214 3 Whilst I do what is fit for me, and
abstain from what is unfit, my neighbor and I shall often agree in our
means...
NR 3.227 24 It is bad enough that our geniuses cannot
do anything useful, but it is worse that no man is fit for society who
has fine traits.
PPh 4.49 21 You are fit (says the supreme Krishna to a
sage) to apprehend
that you are not distinct from me.
PPh 4.59 17 ...the rich man...has that one dress, or
equipage, or instrument, which is fit for the hour and the need;...
PPh 4.59 19 ...Plato, in his plenty, is never
restricted, but has the fit word.
PPh 4.66 3 Such as were fit to govern, into their
composition the informing
Deity mingled gold;...
PPh 4.68 5 Plato...attempted as if on the part of human
intellect, once for
all to do it adequate homage,--homage fit for the immense soul to
receive...
SwM 4.99 10 Such a boy [as Swedenborg]...goes...prying
into...physiology, mathematics and astronomy, to find images fit for
the measure of his
versatile and capacious brain.
MoS 4.162 5 ...some stark and sufficient man...is the
fit person to occupy
this ground of speculation.
MoS 4.172 17 ...neither is [the wise skeptic] fit to
work with any
democratic party that ever was constituted;...
ShP 4.212 14 ...few real men have left such distinct
characters as [Shakespeare's] fictions. And they spoke in language as
sweet as it was fit.
GoW 4.288 25 ...this man [Goethe] was entirely at home
and happy in his
century and the world. None was so fit to live, or more heartily
enjoyed the
game.
ET5 5.84 22 [The English] think him the best dressed
man whose dress is
so fit for his use that you cannot notice or remember to describe it.
ET5 5.99 23 Though not military, yet every common
subject [in England] by the poll is fit to make a soldier of.
ET6 5.112 9 An Englishman of fashion is like one of
those souvenirs...fit
for the hands of ladies and princes, but with nothing in it worth
reading or
remembering.
ET14 5.232 12 ...[the English] delight in strong earthy
expression...and
though spoken among princes, equally fit and welcome to the mob.
ET14 5.255 25 Pope and his school wrote poetry fit to
put round frosted
cake.
Pow 6.65 5 ...churchmen and men of refinement, it seems
agreed, are not fit
persons to send to Congress.
Wth 6.84 7 ...when the quarried means were piled,/ All
is waste and
worthless, till/ Arrives the wise selecting will/ And, out of slime and
chaos, Wit/ Draws the threads of fair and fit./
Ctr 6.142 22 ...you are not fit to direct [your boy's]
bringing-up if your
theory leaves out his gymnastic training.
Ctr 6.149 2 Aubrey writes, I have heard Thomas Hobbes
say, that, in the
Earl of Devon's house, in Derbyshire, there was a good library and
books
enough for him, and his lordship stored the library with what books he
thought fit to be bought.
Ctr 6.165 12 ...Nature began with rudimental forms and
rose to the more
complex as fast as the earth was fit for their dwelling-place;...
Bhr 6.193 21 It is related by the monk Basle, that
being excommunicated
by the Pope, he was, at his death, sent in charge of an angel, to find
a fit
place of suffering in hell;...
Wsp 6.239 13 Immortality will come to such as are fit
for it...
CbW 6.274 12 ...it is marriage, fit or unfit, that
makes our home...
SS 7.7 3 ...no man is fit for society who has fine
traits.
SS 7.11 25 It by no means follows that we are not fit
for society, because
soirees are tedious and because the soiree finds us tedious.
Elo1 7.96 7 [The sturdy countryman] is fit to meet the
barroom wits and
bullies;...
Cour 7.270 7 Every creature has a courage of his
constitution fit for his
duties...
Suc 7.306 23 Everything lasting and fit for men the
Divine Power has
marked with this stamp [of beauty].
Suc 7.308 18 I do not find...grisly photographs of the
field on the day after
the battle, fit subjects for cabinet pictures.
Suc 7.308 25 Nature lays the ground-plan of each
creature accurately, sternly fit for all his functions;...
OA 7.320 1 Age, like woman, requires fit surroundings.
PI 8.44 13 The humor of Falstaff, the terror of
Macbeth, have each their
swarm of fit thoughts and images...
Elo2 8.112 18 ...the political questions...find or form
a class of men by
nature and habit fit to discuss and deal with these measures...
Elo2 8.127 1 If [some men] are to put a thing in proper
shape, fit for the
occasion and the audience, their mind is a blank.
QO 8.184 7 When [the Earl of Strafford] met with a
well-penned oration or
tract upon any subject, he framed a speech upon the same argument,
inventing and disposing what seemed fit to be said upon that subject,
before
he read the book;...
QO 8.200 15 Our country, customs, laws, our ambitions,
and our notions of
fit and fair,-all these we never made...
PC 8.219 1 Even manners are a distinction which...are
not to be overborne... even by other eminent talents, since they too
proceed from a certain deep
innate perception of fit and fair.
PPo 8.244 17 He only [Hafiz] says, is fit for company,
who knows how to
prize earthly happiness at the value of a night-cap.
PPo 8.253 18 Fit for the Pleiads' azure chord/ The
songs I sung, the pearls I
bored./
Insp 8.281 11 ...I fancy that my logs...are a kind of
muses. So of all the
particulars of health and exercise and fit nutriment and tonics.
Grts 8.310 16 ...there is for each a Best Counsel which
enjoins the fit word
and the fit act for every moment.
Grts 8.319 17 ...a very common [illusion] is the
opinion you hear expressed
in every village: O yes, If I lived in...Andover, there might be fit
society;...
Dem1 10.13 9 For Spiritism, it shows that no man,
almost, is fit to give
evidence.
Dem1 10.15 24 I have a lucky hand, sir, said
Napoleon...those on whom I
lay it are fit for anything.
Dem1 10.21 7 ...the fabled ring of Gyges...is simply
mischievous. A new or
private language...the desired discovery of the guided balloon, are of
this
kind. Tramps...descending...on...the bank-messenger in the country, can
well be spared. Men are not fit to be trusted with these talismans.
Aris 10.44 18 If I bring another [man into an estate],
he sees what he
should do with it. He appreciates the...land fit for orchard,
tillage...
Supl 10.173 6 ...fit expression is so rare that mankind
have a superstitious
value for it...
LLNE 10.332 10 [Everett's learning] was so coldly and
weightily
communicated...that, though nothing could be conceived beforehand less
attractive or indeed less fit for green boys from Connecticut, New
Hampshire and Massachusetts...this learning instantly took the highest
place to our imagination...
EzRy 10.395 18 ...in his old age, when all the antique
Hebraism and its
customs are passing away, it is fit that [Ezra Ripley] too should
depart,- most fit that in the fall of laws a loyal man should die.
MMEm 10.413 5 I [Mary Moody Emerson] walked yesterday
five or more
miles...just fit for the society I went into...
Thor 10.458 2 In 1845 [Thoreau] built himself a small
framed house on the
shores of Walden Pond, and lived there two years alone, a life of labor
and
study. This action was quite native and fit for him.
Carl 10.494 25 [Carlyle] preaches, as by cannonade, the
doctrine that every
noble nature...contains, if savage passions, also fit checks and grand
impulses...
HDC 11.29 6 ...the people of New England...as the
second centennial
anniversary of each of its early settlements arrived, have seen fit to
observe
the day.
HDC 11.36 2 ...the rough welcome which the new land
gave [the pilgrims] was a fit introduction to the life they must lead
in it.
War 11.162 25 ...what is true-that is, what is at
bottom fit and agreeable
to the constitution of man-must at last prevail over all obstruction
and all
opposition.
FSLC 11.195 20 ...it is a greater crime to reenslave a
man who has shown
himself fit for freedom, than to enslave him at first, when it might be
pretended to be a mitigation of his lot as a captive in war.
FSLC 11.208 1 [Abolition] is really the project fit for
this country to
entertain and accomplish.
FSLC 11.208 18 It is really the great task fit for this
country to accomplish, to buy that property [slaves] of the planters...
FSLN 11.221 15 [Webster] was there in his Adamitic
capacity, as if he
alone of all men...was a fit figure in the landscape.
TPar 11.286 5 Theodore Parker was...a man of study, fit
for a man of the
world;...
SMC 11.350 14 The town [Concord] has thought fit to
signify its honor for
a few of its sons by raising an obelisk in the square.
EdAd 11.393 4 ...a few friends of good letters have
thought fit to associate
themselves for the conduct of a new journal.
Wom 11.409 26 [Women] are, in their nature, more
relative; the
circumstance must always be fit;...
Wom 11.411 20 [Women] should be found in fit
surroundings...
SHC 11.428 6 ...Here the green pines delight, the aspen
droops/ Along the
modest pathways, and those fair/ Pale asters of the season spread their
plumes/ Around this field, fit garden for our tombs./
SHC 11.429 7 Citizens and Friends: The committee to
whom was confided
the charge of carrying out the wishes of the town [Concord] in opening
the [Sleep Hollow] cemetary...have thought it fit to call the
inhabitants
together...
SHC 11.434 5 ...[Sleepy Hollow] was inevitably chosen
by [the people of
Concord] when the design of a new cemetery was broached...as the fit
place
for their final repose.
FRep 11.535 4 ...the land and sea educate the people,
and bring out
presence of mind, self-reliance, and hundred-handed activity. These are
the
people for an emergency. They...can find a way out of any peril. This
rough
and ready force...makes them fit citizens and civilizers.
PLT 12.32 19 Though the world is full of food we can
take only the crumbs
fit for us.
Bost 12.200 1 What should hinder that this
America...what should hinder
that this New Atlantis should have...its gardens fit for human abode...
MAng1 12.239 10 [Michelangelo] said of his predecessor,
the architect
Bramante, that he laid the first stone of Saint Peter's...with fit
design for a
vast structure.
MAng1 12.243 20 ...there [in Florence], the tradition
of [Michelangelo's] opinions meets the traveller in every spot. ...
Look at these bronze gates of
the Baptistery...cast by Ghiberti five hundred years ago. Michael
Angelo
said, they were fit to be the gates of Paradise.
Milt1 12.249 17 Eager to do fit justice to each
thought, [Milton] does not
subordinate it so as to project the main argument.
Milt1 12.260 6 Very early in life [Milton] became
conscious that he had
more to say to his fellow men than they had fit words to embody.
Milt1 12.260 11 At nineteen years...[Milton] addresses
his native language, saying to it that it would be his choice to leave
trifles for a grave
argument,-Such as may make thee search thy coffers round,/ Before thou
clothe my fancy in fit sound;/...
AgMs 12.361 4 ...why this recommendation [in the
Agricultural Survey] of
stone houses? They are not so cheap, not so dry, and not so fit for us
[New
England farmers].
Let 12.393 10 ...we think the population is not yet
quite fit for [flying-machines]...
Let 12.395 19 It were fit to forbid concert and
calculation in this particular, if that were our system...
fit, n. (5)
AmS 1.99 1 The mind now thinks, now acts, and each fit
reproduces the
other.
Fdsp 2.203 23 To stand in true relations with men in a
false age is worth a
fit of insanity, is it not?
Exp 3.45 18 Did our birth fall in some fit of indigence
and frugality in
nature...
Bhr 6.176 3 When [the old Massachusetts statesman] sat
down, after
speaking, he seemed in a sort of fit...
Cour 7.266 16 Hear what women say of doing a task by
sheer force of will: it costs them a fit of sickness.
fit, v. (30)
AmS 1.88 19 The books of an older period will not fit
this.
Lov1 2.186 24 The person love does to us fit,/ Like
manna, has the taste of
all in it./
Mrs1 3.141 10 A man who is not happy in the company
cannot find any
word in his memory that will fit the occasion.
MoS 4.160 24 An angular, dogmatic house would be rent
to chips and
splinters in this storm of many elements. No, it must be tight, and fit
to the
form of man, to live at all;...
NMW 4.226 12 It struck Dumont that he could fit
[Mirabeau's speech] with a peroration...
ET12 5.209 15 The definition of a public school [in
England] is a school
which excludes all that could fit a man for standing behind a counter.
F 6.42 17 [Man] looks like a piece of luck, but
is...the mosaic, angulated
and ground to fit into the gap he fills.
Wth 6.93 20 Columbus...looks on all kings and peoples
as cowardly
landsmen until they dare fit him out.
Ctr 6.138 5 ...here is a pedant that cannot...conceal
his wrath at interruption
by the best, if their conversation do not fit his impertinency...
CbW 6.273 25 We know that all our training is to fit us
for [friendship]...
Bty 6.298 18 ...our bodies do not fit us...
Bty 6.299 24 Abbe Menage said of the President Le
Bailleul that he was fit
for nothing but to sit for his portrait.
Art2 7.42 5 Man seems to have no option about his
tools, but merely the
necessity to learn from Nature what will fit best...
DL 7.123 4 In the old fables we used to read of a cloak
brought from fairy-land
as a gift for the fairest and purest in Prince Arthur's court. It was
to be
her prize whom it would fit.
DL 7.123 5 Every one was eager to try [the fairy cloak]
on, but it would fit
nobody...
WD 7.169 20 ...in the common experience of the scholar,
the weathers fit
his moods.
QO 8.191 12 ...the worth of the sentences consists in
their radiancy and
equal aptitude to all intelligence. They fit all our facts like a
charm.
Dem1 10.5 10 The very landscape and scenery in a dream
seem not to fit
us...
Plu 10.320 5 [Plutarch] thought it wonderful that a man
having a muse in
his own breast, and all the pleasantness that would fit an
entertainment, would have pipes and harps play...
EzRy 10.381 20 ...[Ezra Ripley's] father agreed with
the late Rev. Dr. Forbes of Gloucester...to fit Ezra for college...
Thor 10.457 16 ...a young girl...sharply asked
[Thoreau], Whether his
lecture...was one of those old philosophical things that she did not
care
about. Henry turned to her...and, I saw, was trying to believe that he
had
matter that might fit her and her brother...
Shak1 11.452 23 ...there are some men so born to live
well that, in
whatever company they fall,-high or low,-they fit well, and lead it!...
Scot 11.464 24 ...[Scott] had the...skill to fit his
verse to his topic...
FRep 11.520 19 We feel toward [politicians] as the
minister about the Cape
Cod farm...the good pastor being brought to the spot, stopped short:
No, this land does not want a prayer, this land wants manure. 'T is
virtue which
they want, and wanting it,/ Honor no garment to their backs can fit./
PLT 12.20 5 This methodizing mind meets no resistance
in its attempts. The scattered blocks, with which it strives to form a
symmetrical structure, fit.
Mem 12.97 21 A knife with a good spring...a watch, the
teeth or jaws of
which fit and play perfectly...describe to us the difference between a
person
of quick and strong perception...and a heavy man who witnesses the same
facts...
CL 12.149 22 [The Indian] goes to a white birch-tree,
and can fit his leg
with a seamless boot, or a hat for his head.
Milt1 12.256 5 [Milton] defined the object of education
to be, to fit a man
to perform justly, skilfully and magnanimously all the offices, both
private
and public, of peace and war.
WSL 12.347 23 [Landor] hates false words, and seeks
with care, difficulty
and moroseness those that fit the thing.
Trag 12.414 10 Particular reliefs...fit themselves to
human calamities;...
Fitchburg, Massachusetts, n. (2)
F 6.42 26 We know in Massachusetts...who
built...Fitchburg...
AKan 11.256 17 Do the Committee of Investigation say
that the outrages [in Kansas] have been overstated? ... Is it an
exaggeration, that...Mr. Jennison of Groton, Mr. Phillips of Berkshire,
have been murdered? That
Mr. Robinson of Fitchburg has been imprisoned?
fitly, adv. (9)
Nat 1.22 5 Homer, Pindar, Socrates, Phocion, associate
themselves fitly in
our memory with the geography and climate of Greece.
Nat 1.57 25 ...religion and ethics, which may be fitly
called the practice of
ideas...have an analogous effect with all lower culture...
LE 1.177 2 ...literary men...dealing with the organ of
language...only fitly
used as the weapon of thought and of justice,-learn to enjoy the pride
of
playing with this splendid engine...
MN 1.218 20 Behold! there is the sun, and the rain, and
the rocks; the old
sun, the old stones. How easy were it to describe all this fitly; yet
no word
can pass.
NR 3.245 19 Very fitly therefore I assert that every
man is a partialist;...
GoW 4.287 25 When [Goethe] sits down to write a drama
or a tale, he
collects and sorts his observations from a hundred sides, and combines
them into the body as fitly as he can.
ET17 5.291 15 ...what is nowhere better found than in
England, a cultivated
person fitly surrounded by a happy home, with Honor, love, obedience,
troops of friends,/ is of all institutions the best.
ET19 5.309 7 In looking over recently a
newspaper-report of my remarks [at the Manchester Atheneaum Banquet], I
incline to reprint it, as fitly
expressing the feeling with which I entered England...
SHC 11.434 8 In all the multitudes of woodlands and
hillsides, which
within a few years have been laid out with a similar design [as a
cemetery], I have not known one so fitly named. Sleepy Hollow.
fitness, n. (23)
AmS 1.103 18 The orator distrusts at first the fitness
of his frank
confessions...
MR 1.240 24 ...where a man does not yet discover in
himself any fitness for
one work more than another, [the husbandman's] may be preferred.
MR 1.243 19 The duty that every man...should call the
institutions of
society to account, and examine their fitness to him, gains in emphasis
if we
look at our modes of living.
Gts 3.163 10 I say to [the donor], How can you give me
this pot of oil or
this flagon of wine when all your oil and wine is mine, which belief of
mine
this gift seems to deny? Hence the fitness of beautiful, not useful
things, for
gifts.
NER 3.281 20 Each [man] is incomparably superior to his
companion in
some faculty. His want of skill in other directions has added to his
fitness
for his own work.
ShP 4.212 23 [A man of talents] crams this part and
starves that other part, consulting not the fitness of the thing, but
his fitness and strength.
ShP 4.212 24 [A man of talents] crams this part and
starves that other part, consulting not the fitness of the thing, but
his fitness and strength.
ET5 5.84 12 [The English] study use and fitness in
their building...
F 6.37 16 Eyes are found in light;...and each creature
where it was meant to
be, with a mutual fitness.
F 6.39 24 The same fitness must be presumed between a
man and the time
and event, as between the sexes...
Ctr 6.161 10 Archimedes will look through your
Connecticut machine at a
glance, and judge of its fitness.
Wsp 6.204 8 Nature has...certain proportions in which
oxygen and azote
combine, and not less a harmony in faculties, a fitness in the spring
and the
regulator.
Bty 6.290 12 ...in the construction of any fabric or
organism any real
increase of fitness to its end is an increase of beauty.
Art2 7.53 3 Fitness is so inseparable an accompaniment
of beauty that it
has been taken for it.
QO 8.203 6 Our pleasure in seeing each mind take the
subject to which it
has a proper right is seen in mere fitness in time.
Dem1 10.8 24 In dreams I see [Rupert] engaged in
certain actions which
seem...out of all fitness.
Dem1 10.23 10 ...the so-called fortunate man is
one...who...waits his time, and without effort acts when the need is.
If to this you add a fitness to the
society around him, you have the elements of fortune;...
Thor 10.461 16 [Thoreau's] senses were acute...his
hands strong and skilful
in the use of tools. And there was a wonderful fitness of body and
mind.
War 11.175 20 There is the highest fitness in the place
and time in which
this enterprise [Congress of Nations] is begun.
EPro 11.316 16 [Movement toward liberty]...is as when
an orator...having
run over the superficial fitness and commodities of the measure he
urges... announces with vibrating voice the grand human principles
involved;...
Wom 11.424 26 When new opinions appear, they will be
entertained and
respected, by every fair mind, according to their reasonableness, and
not
according to...their fitness to shock our customs.
RBur 11.439 10 ...I must trust to the inspirations of
the theme [of the Burns
Festival] to make a fitness which does not otherwise exist.
Milt1 12.274 1 Was there not a fitness in the
undertaking of such a person [as Milton] to write a poem on the subject
of Adam...
fits, n. (5)
AmS 1.98 24 ...these fits of easy transmission and
reflection...are the law of
nature...
Hsm1 2.260 5 All men have...fits and starts of
generosity.
Exp 3.68 12 ...the mind...never prospers but by fits.
Res 8.150 6 ...the law of light, which Newton said
proceeded by fits of easy
reflection and transmission...is the law of mind;...
Schr 10.280 2 ...society, in which we live, is subject
to fits of frenzy;...
fits, v. (16)
Nat 1.9 15 Nature is a setting that fits equally well a
comic or a mourning
piece.
Nat 1.71 23 [Man] sees that the structure still fits
him, but fits him
colossally.
MR 1.248 7 ...we are to see that the world not only
fitted the former men, but fits us...
SL 2.142 5 The common experience is that the man fits
himself as well as
he can to the customary details of that work or trade he falls into...
SwM 4.121 15 In the transmission of the heavenly
waters, every hose fits
every hydrant.
SwM 4.122 12 [Swedenborg's religion]...fits every part
of life...
ET9 5.147 17 The English have a steady courage that
fits them for great
attempts and endurance...
F 6.38 2 ...[every creature] has predisposing power
that bends and fits what
is near him to his use.
F 6.40 7 [The event] fits you like your skin.
Pow 6.59 16 The weaker party finds that none of his
information or wit
quite fits the occasion.
WD 7.168 17 How the day fits itself to the
mind...clothing all its fancies!
Boks 7.216 13 Nature has a magic by which she fits the
man to his
fortunes...
PPo 8.256 10 O high-flying falcon! the Tree of Life is
thy perch;/ This
nook of grief fits thee ill for a nest./
Dem1 10.5 15 The very landscape and scenery in a dream
seem...like a coat
or cloak of some other person to overlap and encumber the wearer;...and
if
it served no other purpose would show us how accurately Nature fits man
awake.
PLT 12.20 13 It is necessary to suppose that every hose
in Nature fits every
hydrant;...
Mem 12.98 4 The way in which...any orator surprises us
is by his always
having a sharp tool that fits the present use.
fitted, adj. (2)
MMEm 10.403 15 My opinion, [Mary Moody Emerson] writes,
[is]...that
the fiery depths of Calvinism...would have alone been fitted to fix
[Byron'
s] imagination.
HDC 11.57 6 The General Court, in 1647...Ordered, that
every...where any
town shall increase to the number of one hundred families, they shall
set up
a Grammar school, the masters thereof being able to instruct youth so
far as
they may be fitted for the University.
fitted, v. (16)
Nat 1.71 24 Say, rather, [the structure] once fitted
[man]...
MR 1.248 6 ...we are to see that the world not only
fitted the former men, but fits us...
SR 2.83 4 ...if the American artist will study...the
precise thing to be done
by him...he will create a house in which all these [beauty,
convenience, grandeur of thought] will find themselves fitted...
ShP 4.206 10 We tell the chronicle of
parentage...celebrity, death; and
when we have come to an end of this gossip...it seems as if, had we
dipped
at random into the Modern Plutarch and read any other life there, it
would
have fitted [Shakespeare's] poems as well.
ET13 5.216 25 The Catholic Church, thrown on this
toiling, serious people [of England], has made in fourteen centuries a
massive system, close fitted
to the manners and genius of the country...
F 6.45 5 Moller...taught that the building which was
fitted accurately to
answer its end would turn out to be beautiful...
Clbs 7.233 7 It does not help that you find as good or
a better man than
yourself, if he is not timed and fitted to you.
Insp 8.278 13 Herrick said: 'T is not every day that I/
Fitted am to
prophesy;/...
Edc1 10.130 6 Whatever the man does, or whatever
befalls him, opens
another chamber in his soul,-that is, he has got a new feeling, a new
thought, a new organ. Do we not see how amazingly for this end man is
fitted to the world?
LLNE 10.330 17 Germany had created criticism in vain
for us until 1820, when Edward Everett...brought to Cambridge his rich
results, which no one
was so fitted by natural grace and the splendor of his rhetoric to
introduce
and recommend.
LLNE 10.336 5 ...the paramount source of the religious
revolution was
Modern Science; beginning with Copernicus, who destroyed the pagan
fictions of the Church, by showing mankind that the earth on which we
live
was not the centre of the Universe...and thus fitted to be the platform
on
which the Drama of the Divine Judgment was played before the assembled
Angels of Heaven...
EzRy 10.381 24 ...when fitted for college, the son
[Ezra Ripley] could not
be contented with teaching...
Thor 10.480 14 Had [Thoreau's] genius been only
contemplative, he had
been fitted to his life...
ALin 11.334 17 [Lincoln's] mind mastered the problem of
the day; and as
the problem grew, so did his comprehension of it. Rarely was man so
fitted
to the event.
Bost 12.189 23 John Smith writes (1624): Of all the
four parts of the world
that I have yet seen not inhabited, could I but have means to
transplant a
colony, I would rather live here [in New England] than anywhere; and if
it
did not maintain itself, were we but once indifferently well fitted,
let us
starve.
Bost 12.195 22 The General Court of Massachusetts, in
1647, To the end
that learning may not be buried in the graves of the forefathers,
ordered, that...where any town shall increase to the number of a
hundred families, they shall set up a Grammar School, the Masters
thereof being able to
instruct youth so far as they may be fitted for the University.
fitter, adj. (3)
Pol1 3.207 16 [Our political institutions] are not
better, but only fitter for us.
Comc 8.173 10 ...what is fitter than that we should
espouse and carry a
principle against all opposition?
Grts 8.308 14 ...Nelson, said, I feel that I am fitter
to do the action than to
describe it.
fittest, adj. (3)
MR 1.236 7 ...when the majority shall admit the
necessity of reform in all
these institutions [commerce, law, state]...a man may select the
fittest
employment for his peculiar talent again, without compromise.
Pt1 3.11 21 ...the phrase will be the fittest, most
musical, and the unerring
voice of the world for that time.
PPh 4.75 11 ...the figure of Socrates by a necessity
placed itself in the
foreground of the scene, as the fittest dispenser of the intellectual
treasures [Plato] had to communicate.
fitting, adj. (2)
Bty 6.291 16 How beautiful are ships on the sea! but
ships in the theatre,-- or ships kept for picturesque effect on
Virginia Water by George IV., and
men hired to stand in fitting costumes at a penny an hour!
Plu 10.319 4 What a fruit and fitting monument of
[Alexander's] best days
was his city Alexandria...
fitting, n. (1)
PLT 12.20 11 It is certain that however we may conceive
of the wonderful
little bricks of which the world is builded, we must suppose a
similarity and
fitting and identity in their frame.
fitting, v. (1)
Art2 7.42 6 Man seems to have no option about his tools,
but merely the
necessity to learn from Nature what will fit best, as if he were
fitting a
screw or a door.
Content (Text): Copyright
© 2005 by Charlotte York Irey
Coding (HTML): Copyright © 2005 by Bradley P. Dean All Rights Reserved
Back
to Emerson Concordance home Special
Collections home Library
home
|