Sail to Samos

A Concordance to the Collected Essays of Ralph Waldo Emerson
Compiled by Eugene F. Irey

sail, n. (22)

    LT 1.288 1 Here we drift, like white sail across the wild ocean...
    Con 1.311 25 ...for thee...fleets of floating palaces...swim by sail and by steam through all the waters of this world.
    Hsm1 2.259 27 ...O friend, never strike sail to a fear!
    Exp 3.46 24 Embark, and the romance quits our vessel and hangs on every other sail in the horizon.
    MoS 4.159 27 [The skeptic] is the considerer...taking in sail...
    GoW 4.263 13 Vexations and a tempest of passion only fill [the writer's] sail;...
    ET2 5.26 22 At last...the storm came, the winds blew, and we flew before a northwester which strained every rope and sail.
    ET2 5.27 3 ...[the good ship] has reached the Banks;...gulls, haglets, ducks, petrels, swim, dive and hover around; no fishermen; she has passed the Banks, left five sail behind her far on the edge of the west at sundown...
    ET2 5.32 23 ...I think the white path of an Atlantic ship the right avenue to the palace front of this seafaring people [the English], who for hundreds of years...exacted toll and the striking sail from the ships of all other peoples.
    ET4 5.56 12 The men who have built a ship and invented the rig, cordage, sail, compass and pump;...have acquired much more than a ship.
    Wth 6.84 10 ...Then flew the sail across the seas/ To feed the North from tropic trees;/...
    OA 7.314 3 As the bird trims her to the gale,/ I trim myself to the storm of time,/ I man the rudder, reef the sail,/ Obey the voice at eve obeyed at prime/...
    Res 8.144 19 The sailor by his boat and sail makes a ford out of deepest waters.
    Insp 8.289 17 ...the mixture of lie in truth, and the experience of poetic creativeness...these are the types or conditions of this power [of novelty]. A ride near the sea, a sail near the shore, said the ancient.
    SovE 10.196 13 ...we are never without a pilot. When we know not how to steer, and dare not hoist a sail, we can drift.
    SovE 10.196 17 ...when we have conversed with navigators who know the coast, we may begin to put out an oar and trim a sail.
    HDC 11.36 24 ...standing on the seashore, [the Indians] often told of the coming of a ship at sea, sooner by one hour, yea, two hours' sail, than any Englishman that stood by, on purpose to look out.
    HDC 11.62 15 Alas! for [the Indians]-their day is o'er,/ Their fires are out from hill and shore,/ No more for them the wild deer bounds,/ The plough is on their hunting grounds;/ The pale man's axe rings in their woods,/ The pale man's sail skims o'er their floods,/ Their pleasant springs are dry./
    War 11.158 21 I [Cavendish] navigated along the coast of Chili, Peru, and New Spain, where I made great spoils. I burnt and sunk nineteen sail of ships...
    Wom 11.407 5 In this ship of humanity, Will is the rudder, and Sentiment the sail...
    Wom 11.407 6 In this ship of humanity, Will is the rudder, and Sentiment the sail: when Woman affects to steer, the rudder is only a masked sail.
    Bost 12.199 9 John Smith says, Thirty, forty, or fifty sail went yearly in America only to trade and fish...

sail, v. (20)

    Nat 1.20 12 All those things for which men plough, build, or sail, obey virtue;...
    AmS 1.97 24 Authors we have, in numbers...who...sail for Greece...to replenish their merchantable stock.
    LT 1.288 3 ...from what port did we sail?
    Fdsp 2.207 18 In good company the individuals merge their egotism into a social soul exactly co-extensive with the several consciousnesses there present. ... Only he may then speak who can sail on the common thought of the party...
    Hsm1 2.260 1 Come into port greatly, or sail with God the seas.
    OS 2.283 12 Do not require a description of the countries towards which you sail.
    Pt1 3.25 12 The sea...and every flower-bed, pre-exist or super-exist, in pre-cantations, which sail like odors in the air...
    Exp 3.46 22 Every ship is a romantic object, except that we sail in.
    GoW 4.273 2 What new mythologies sail through [Goethe's] head!
    ET4 5.56 17 The men who have built a ship and invented the rig, cordage, sail, compass and pump;...have acquired much more than a ship. Now arm them and every shore is at their mercy. For if they have not numerical superiority where they anchor, they have only to sail a mile or two to find it.
    ET4 5.70 12 [The English] box, run, shoot, ride, row, and sail from pole to pole.
    Pow 6.55 22 If Eric is in robust health...at his departure from Greenland he will steer west, and his ships will reach Newfoundland. But take out Eric and put in a stronger and bolder man...and the ships will...sail six hundred... miles further...
    Boks 7.203 10 ...[in the Platonists] the grand and pleasing figures of gods and daemons and daemoniacal men...sail before [the scholar's] eyes.
    OA 7.323 10 [Age] has weathered the perilous capes and shoals in the sea whereon we sail...
    SA 8.103 8 It is of course that [the American to be proud of] should ride well, shoot well, sail well, keep house well, administer affairs well;...
    Plu 10.302 6 We sail on [Plutarch's] memory into the ports of every nation...
    EWI 11.123 13 ...we...have acquired the vices and virtues that belong to trade. We peddle, we truck, we sail...to market, and for the sale of goods.
    FRep 11.511 6 The sailors sail by chronometers that do not lose two or three seconds in a year...
    Bost 12.199 24 What should hinder that this America...the firm shore hid until...a man should be found who should sail steadily west fixty-eight days from the port of Palos to find it...should have its happy ports...
    Bost 12.211 8 ...the Quincy of the Revolution seems compensated for the shortness of his bright career in the son who so long lingers among the last of those bright clouds, That on the steady breeze of honor sail/ In long succession calm and beautiful./

sailed, v. (4)

    ET2 5.26 9 ...I took my berth in the packet-ship Washington Irving and sailed from Boston on Tuesday, 5th October, 1847.
    ET9 5.152 22 Amerigo Vespucci...whose highest naval rank was boatswain' s mate in an expedition that never sailed, managed in this lying world to supplant Columbus...
    ET16 5.282 11 Hercules, in the legend, drew his bow at the sun, and the sun-god gave him a golden cup, with which he sailed over the ocean.
    ET18 5.303 21 ...who would see...the explosion of their well-husbanded forces, must follow the swarms which pouring out now for two hundred years from the British islands, have sailed and rode and traded and planted through all climates...

sailing, adj. (2)

    ET2 5.27 9 The shortest sea-line from Boston to Liverpool is 2850 miles. This a steamer keeps, and saves 150 miles. A sailing ship can never go in a shorter line than 3000...
    ET2 5.28 12 ...that wonderful esprit du corps by which we adopt into our self-love every thing we touch, makes us all champions of [a ship's] sailing qualities.

sailing, n. (4)

    Gts 3.162 2 The law of benefits is a difficult channel, which requires careful sailing, or rude boats.
    WD 7.174 27 ...your homage to Dante costs you so much sailing;...
    Plu 10.304 27 ...asking Epaminondas about the manner of Lysis's burial, I found that Lysis had taught him as far as the incommunicable mysteries of our sect, and that the same Daemon that waited on Lysis, presided over him, if I can guess at the pilot from the sailing of the ship.
    FSLC 11.189 2 ...men have to to with rectitude, with benefit, with truth, with something that is, independent of appearances: and...this tie makes the substantiality of life, and not their ploughing, or sailing, their trade, or the breeding of families.

sailing, v. (4)

    Bty 6.287 22 ...[the ancients] pretended to guess the pilot by the sailing of the ship.
    PI 8.6 23 Suppose there were in the ocean certain strong currents which drove a ship, caught in them, with a force that no skill of sailing with the best wind, and no strength of oars, or sails, or steam, could make any head against...
    Res 8.137 4 We are...each sailing out on a voyage of discovery...
    Schr 10.273 16 Other men are...running and sailing...

sailing-master, n. (1)

    ET4 5.54 1 We say, in a regatta or yacht-race, that if the boats are anywhere nearly matched, it is the man that wins. Put the best sailing-master into either boat, and he will win.

sailor, n. (28)

    Nat 1.38 27 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 1.42 9 ...the sailor, the shepherd, the miner, the merchant...have each an experience precisely parallel...
    AmS 1.84 3 ...the sailor [becomes] a rope of the ship.
    MR 1.237 16 ...it is the sailor, the hide-drogher...who have intercepted the sugar of the sugar...
    Comp 2.114 7 It is best...to buy...in your sailor, good sense applied to navigation;...
    Prd1 2.237 25 The drover, the sailor, buffets it all day...
    Gts 3.161 14 The only gift is a portion of thyself. ... Therefore the poet brings his poem;...the sailor, coral and shells;...
    ET2 5.30 11 ...the wonder is always new that any sane man can be a sailor.
    ET2 5.31 9 A great mind is a good sailor...
    ET5 5.101 13 ...the [English] sailor times his oars to God save the King!
    ET19 5.313 1 Is it not true, sir, that the wise ancients did not praise the ship parting with flying colors from the port, but only that brave sailor which came back with torn sheets and battered sides...
    F 6.32 4 The water drowns ship and sailor like a grain of dust.
    Civ 7.21 5 The power which the sea requires in the sailor makes a man of him very fast...
    Farm 7.154 2 That uncorrupted behavior which we admire in animals and in young children belongs to [the farmer], to the hunter, the sailor...
    WD 7.167 15 Hesiod wrote a poem which he called Works and Days... instructing the husbandman...when to gather wood, when the sailor might launch his boat in security from storms...
    Cour 7.263 16 The sailor loses fear as fast as he acquires command of sails and spars and steam;...
    PI 8.31 4 Every writer is...a sailor, who can only land where sails can be blown.
    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 8.144 15 The Indian, the sailor, the hunter, only these know the power of the hands, feet, teeth, eyes and ears.
    Res 8.144 19 The sailor by his boat and sail makes a ford out of deepest waters.
    PerF 10.76 7 ...a man draws on all the air for his occasions, as if there were no other breather; on all the water as if there were no other sailor;...
    Chr2 10.118 6 The power that in other times inspired...the modern revivals, flies...to the education of the sailor and the vagabond boy...
    ALin 11.335 6 ...what an occasion was the whirlwind of the war. Here was place for...no fair-weather sailor;...
    CL 12.135 10 The land, the care of land, seems to be the calling of the people of this new country, of those, at least, who have not some decided bias, driving them to a particular craft, as a born sailor or machinist.
    CL 12.161 12 The college is not so wise as the mechanic's shop, nor the quarter-deck as the forecastle. Witness the insatiable interest of the white man about...the hunter and sailor.
    CW 12.178 21 That uncorrupted behavior which we admire in the animals, and in young children, belongs also to the farmer, the hunter, the sailor, the man who lives in the presence of Nature.
    Bost 12.205 23 The sailor and the merchant [in America] made the law to suit themselves...
    WSL 12.344 21 [Landor] draws his own portrait in the costume of a village schoolmaster, and a sailor...

sailors, n. (24)

    MR 1.232 11 ...I will not inquire into the oppression of the sailors;...
    LT 1.288 11 ...to what port are we bound? Who knows! There is no one to tell us but such poor weather-tossed mariners as ourselves... But what know they more than we? They also found themselves on this wondrous sea. No; from the older sailors, nothing.
    Tran 1.345 10 Talk with a seaman of the hazards to life in his profession and he will ask you, Where are the old sailors?
    Tran 1.358 13 ...in society, besides farmers, sailors, and weavers, there must be a few persons of purer fire kept specially as gauges and meters of character;...
    MoS 4.166 8 ...[Montaigne] will talk with sailors and gipsies...
    NMW 4.229 7 To be sure there are men enough who are immersed in things, as...sailors...
    ET2 5.30 16 ...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, with a knife in his belt...
    ET2 5.30 22 The mate avers that this is the history of all sailors; nine out of ten are runaway boys;...
    ET2 5.31 1 If sailors were contented...I should respect them.
    ET4 5.64 20 As soon as this land [England]...got a hardy people into it, they could not help becoming the sailors and factors of the globe.
    ET8 5.131 17 ...Nelson said of his sailors, They really mind shot no more than peas.
    ET11 5.192 1 ...the English Channel was swept and London threatened by the Dutch fleet, manned too by English sailors...
    ET14 5.232 4 A strong common sense...marks the English mind for a thousand years; a rude strength newly applied to thought, as of sailors and soldiers who had lately learned to read.
    Pow 6.62 13 The rough-and-ready style which belongs to a people of sailors, foresters, farmers and mechanics, has its advantages.
    Ctr 6.146 6 Naturalists, discoverers and sailors are born.
    Elo1 7.74 5 I know no remedy against [an oiled tongue] but...the wax which Ulysses stuffed into the ears of his sailors to pass the Sirens safely.
    PI 8.46 13 Sailors can work better for their yo-heave-o.
    QO 8.203 12 Landsmen and sailors freshly come from the most civilized countries...healthily receive and report what they saw...
    Grts 8.316 13 ...in the lives of soldiers, sailors and men of large adventure, many of the stays and guards of our household life are wanting...
    Edc1 10.150 22 [In colleges] You have to work for large classes instead of individuals; you must lower your flag and reef your sails to wait for the dull sailors;...
    FRep 11.511 5 The sailors sail by chronometers that do not lose two or three seconds in a year...
    FRep 11.526 19 In Massachusetts, every twelfth man is a shoemaker, and the rest, millers, farmers, sailors, fishermen.
    Bost 12.209 27 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 sailors will man the Constitution;...
    Trag 12.411 12 The most exposed classes, soldiers, sailors, paupers, are nowise destitute of animal spirits.

sailor's, n. (1)

    Cour 7.263 19 To the sailor's experience every new circumstance suggests what he must do.

sails, n. (14)

    MR 1.235 12 ...will you...set every man to make his own shoes, bureau, knife, wagon, sails, and needle?
    Hsm1 2.243 10 ...Chambers of the great are jails,/ And head-winds right for royal sails./
    Cir 2.302 24 See the investment of capital in aqueducts, made useless by hydraulics;...sails, by steam...
    ET4 5.59 21 King Hake of Sweden cuts and slashes in battle, as long as he can stand, then orders his war-ship, loaded with his dead men and their weapons, to be taken out to sea, the tiller shipped and the sails spread;...
    Art2 7.42 3 It is the law of fluids that prescribes the shape of the boat...and, in the finer fluid above, the form and tackle of the sails.
    Farm 7.138 23 [The farmer] bends to the order of the seasons, the weather, the soils and crops, as the sails of a ship bend to the wind.
    Cour 7.263 17 The sailor loses fear as fast as he acquires command of sails and spars and steam;...
    PI 8.6 24 Suppose there were in the ocean certain strong currents which drove a ship, caught in them, with a force that no skill of sailing with the best wind, and no strength of oars, or sails, or steam, could make any head against...
    PI 8.31 5 Every writer is...a sailor, who can only land where sails can be blown.
    PI 8.31 9 ...skates allow the good skater far more grace than his best walking would show, or sails more than riding.
    PerF 10.74 15 ...if [man] should fight the sea and the whirlwind with his ship, he would snap his spars, tear his sails, and swamp his bark;...
    Edc1 10.150 21 [In colleges] You have to work for large classes instead of individuals; you must lower your flag and reef your sails to wait for the dull sailors;...
    Schr 10.276 6 There is plenty of air, but it is worth nothing until by gathering it into sails we can get it into shape and service to carry us and our cargo across the sea.
    Bost 12.190 19 In our beautiful [Boston] bay, with its broad and deep waters covered with sails from every port...a good boatman can easily find his way for the first time to the State House...

sails, v. (4)

    Pol1 3.211 20 Fisher Ames expressed the popular security more wisely... saying that a monarchy is a merchantman, which sails well, but will sometimes strike on a rock and go to the bottom;...
    SwM 4.145 4 In the shipwreck...the pilot chooses with science,--I plant myself here; all will sink before this; he comes to land who sails with me.
    Art2 7.52 16 Raphael paints wisdom...Columbus sails it...
    PerF 10.72 7 These [natural] forces...seem to leave no room for the individual; man or atom...he sails the way these irresistible winds blow.

saint, n. (44)

    DSA 1.144 23 All men go in flocks to this saint or that poet...
    LE 1.184 2 Show frankly as a saint would do, your experience, methods, tools, and means.
    MN 1.194 26 When all is said and done, the rapt saint is found the only logician.
    MN 1.208 19 Why then goest thou as some Boswell or listening worshipper to this saint or to that?
    MR 1.234 7 Suppose a man is so unhappy as to be born a saint...and he is to get his living in the world;...
    Tran 1.355 14 A saint should be as dear as the apple of the eye.
    YA 1.371 14 ...the land...of the saint, [America] should speak for the human race.
    Hist 2.3 6 What Plato has thought, he [that is once admitted to the right of reason] may think; what a saint has felt, he may feel;...
    Hist 2.12 20 ...to the saint, all things are friendly and sacred...
    SR 2.67 3 Man...quotes some saint or sage.
    SR 2.69 22 This one fact the world hates; that the soul becomes; for that... confounds the saint with the rogue...
    Cir 2.317 1 The virtues of society are vices of the saint.
    Exp 3.64 5 Nature, as we know her, is no saint.
    Exp 3.76 22 ...it is...the rounding mind's eye which makes this or that man a type or representative of humanity, with the name of hero or saint.
    PPh 4.75 7 The rare coincidence [in Socrates], in one ugly body, of...the keen street and market debater with the sweetest saint known to any history at that time, had forcibly struck the mind of Plato...
    SwM 4.95 5 All men are commanded by the saint.
    MoS 4.184 27 ...in the soul of the soaring saint, this chasm is found,-- between the largest promise of ideal power, and the shabby experience.
    ShP 4.200 9 The Liturgy...is...a translation of the prayers and forms of the Catholic church,--these collected...from the prayers and meditations of every saint and sacred writer all over the world.
    ShP 4.210 23 ...[Shakespeare] is like some saint whose history is to be rendered into all languages...
    NMW 4.225 12 [Napoleon] is no saint...
    GoW 4.270 26 [Goethe] appears at a time...when, in the absence of heroic characters, a social comfort and cooperation have come in. There is...no prophet or saint, but colleges of divinity;...
    GoW 4.285 3 The lurking daemons sat to [Goethe], and the saint who saw the daemons;...
    ET13 5.222 3 Wellington esteems a saint only as far as he can be an army chaplain...
    ET13 5.222 27 The action of the university...is directed more on producing an English gentleman, than a saint or a psychologist.
    Ctr 6.157 10 The saint and poet seek privacy to ends the most public and universal...
    Bhr 6.194 15 The legend says [the monk Basle's] sentence was remitted, and he...was canonized as a saint.
    Wsp 6.231 8 What is vulgar...but the avarice of reward? 'T is the difference...of sinner and saint.
    CbW 6.255 10 What would painter do, or what would poet or saint, but for crucifixions and hells?
    Civ 7.30 13 It was a great instruction, said a saint in Cromwell's war, that the best courages are but beams of the Almighty.
    Clbs 7.231 2 Conversation in society is found to be on a platform so low as to exclude science, the saint and the poet.
    PI 8.11 17 ...the saint [sees] an argument for devotion in every natural process;...
    Comc 8.169 6 The poverty of the saint...is not comic.
    PPo 8.248 21 [Hafiz] tells his mistress that not the dervish, or the monk, but the lover, has in his heart the spirit which makes the ascetic and the saint;...
    PPo 8.250 23 A saint might lend an ear to the riotous fun of Falstaff;...
    Grts 8.313 11 No aristocrat...can begin to compare with the self-respect of the saint.
    Chr2 10.103 25 The [moral] sentiment...measures...whatever philanthropy, or politics, or saint, or seer pretends to speak in its name.
    SovE 10.195 7 The new saint gloried in infirmities.
    SovE 10.200 20 It seems as if, when the Spirit of God speaks so plainly to each soul, it were an impiety to be listening to one or another saint.
    MoL 10.255 3 ...neither saint nor sage, can compare with that counsel which is open to you.
    LLNE 10.347 23 Mr. Owen preached his doctrine of labor and reward, with the fidelity and devotion of a saint...
    MMEm 10.433 10 ...every banker, shopkeeper and wood-sawer has a stake in the elevation of the moral code by saint and prophet.
    SMC 11.359 17 [George Prescott] was a man...who never fancied himself a philosopher or a saint;...
    FRO2 11.489 2 If you are childish, and exhibit your saint as a worker of wonders, a thaumaturgist, I am repelled.
    CInt 12.125 13 In the romance Spiridion...we had...the story of a young saint who comes into a convent for her education...

Saint, n. (1)

    Aris 10.51 18 The day is darkened...when genius grows...reckless of its fine duties of being Saint, Prophet, Inspirer to its humble fellows...

Saint of Iona, n. (1)

    ET16 5.279 27 [Carlyle] can see, as he reads [the Acta Sanctorum], the old Saint of Iona sitting there and writing, a man to men.

Saint Peter's Basilica, Ro (1)

    MAng1 12.235 4 Not until he was in the seventy-third year of his age, [Michelangelo] undertook the building of Saint Peter's.

Sainte-Beuve, Charles Augu (2)

    SA 8.94 16 Sainte-Beuve tells us of the privileged circle at Coppet...
    Plu 10.296 19 ...recently, there has been a remarkable revival, in France, in the taste for Plutarch and his contemporaries; led...by the eminent critic Sainte-Beuve.

sainted, adj. (2)

    OS 2.295 22 Before the immense possibilities of man...all past biography, however spotless and sainted, shrinks away.
    Mrs1 3.131 17 A sainted soul is always elegant...

Saint-Evremond, Charles de, (2)

    Plu 10.296 5 Saint-Evremond read Plutarch to the great Conde under a tent.
    LLNE 10.354 9 Fourier was of the opinion of Saint-Evremond; abstinence from pleasure appeared to him a great sin.

Saint-Hilaire, Geoffroy, n. (1)

    Grts 8.311 9 The world was created as an audience for [the scholar]; the atoms of which it is made are opportunities. Read the performance of Bentley...Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire...

Saint-Just, Louis Antoine (1)

    SA 8.85 21 Keep cool, and you command everybody, said Saint-Just;...

saintly, adj. (1)

    ET13 5.224 11 [The English] put up no Socratic prayer, much less any saintly prayer for the Queen's mind;...

saints, n. (48)

    Comp 2.94 21 What did the preacher mean by saying that the good are miserable in the present life? Was it that houses and lands, offices, wine, horses, dress, luxury, are had by unprincipled men, whilst the saints are poor and despised;...
    Prd1 2.229 27 The Raphael in the Dresden gallery...is the quietest and most passionless piece you can imagine; a couple of saints who worship the Virgin and Child.
    OS 2.296 3 The saints and demigods whom history worships we are constrained to accept with a grain of allowance.
    Exp 3.79 12 Saints are sad, because they behold sin...from the point of view of the conscience...
    Chr1 3.114 4 The history of those gods and saints which the world has written and then worshipped, are documents of character.
    Mrs1 3.125 2 My gentleman...will outpray saints in chapel...
    NR 3.227 8 All our poets, heroes and saints, fail utterly in some one or in many parts to satisfy our idea...
    NR 3.248 15 ...I endeavored to show my good men...that I revered saints, but woke up glad that the old pagan world stood its ground and died hard;...
    UGM 4.18 15 Especially when a mind of powerful method has instructed men, we find the examples of oppression. The dominion of Aristotle...in religion the history of hierarchies, of saints, and the sects which have taken the name of each founder, are in point.
    SwM 4.94 11 If we tire of the saints, Shakspeare is our city of refuge.
    SwM 4.97 5 All religious history contains traces of the trance of saints...
    SwM 4.140 21 No imprudent, no sociable angel ever dropt an early syllable to answer the longings of saints, the fears of mortals.
    MoS 4.150 12 Plotinus believes only in philosophers; Fenelon, in saints;...
    MoS 4.174 11 My astonishing San Carlo thought the lawgivers and saints infected.
    MoS 4.174 18 Bad as was to me this detection by San Carlo [that all direct ascension leads to ghastly insight]...there was still a worse, namely the cloy or satiety of the saints.
    ET6 5.112 22 Sir Philip Sidney is one of the patron saints of England...
    ET12 5.212 15 Universities are of course hostile to geniuses...as churches and monasteries persecute youthful saints.
    ET13 5.216 22 ...George Fox, Penn, Bunyan are the democrats, as well as the saints of their times.
    Pow 6.66 1 Philanthropic and religious bodies do not commonly make their executive officers out of saints.
    Wsp 6.203 1 ...whether your community is made...of saints or of wreckers, it coheres in a perfect ball.
    Wsp 6.234 9 Under the whip of the driver, the slave shall feel his equality with saints and heroes.
    Cour 7.253 15 ...when [men] see [the preference to the general good] proved by sacrifices of ease, wealth, rank, and of life itself, there is no limit to their admiration. This has made the power of the saints of the East and West...
    PI 8.3 22 In spite of all the joys of poets and the joys of saints, the most imaginative and abstracted person never makes with impunity the least mistake in this particular,--never tries to kindle his oven with water...
    PI 8.10 7 Sonnets of lovers...are valuable to the philosopher, as are prayers of saints, for their potent symbolism.
    PI 8.19 5 In the presence and conversation of a true poet, teeming with images to express his enlarging thought, his person, his form, grows larger to our fascinated eyes. And thus begins that deification which all nations have made of their heroes in every kind,--saints, poets, lawgivers and warriors.
    Comc 8.166 15 ...The mighty Tottipottymoy/ Sent to our elders an envoy,/ Complaining loudly of the breach/ Of league held forth by Brother Patch,/ Against the articles in force/ Between both churches, his and ours,/ For which he craved the saints to render/ Into his hands, or hang the offender;/...
    PC 8.220 16 How much more are...the wise and good souls...Socrates in Athens, the saints in Judea...than the foolish and sensual millions around them!
    Imtl 8.321 6 Wilt thou not ope thy heart to know/ What rainbows teach, and sunsets show?/ Verdict which accumulates/ From lengthening scroll of human fates/ Voice of earth to earth returned,/ Prayers of saints that inly burned,-/...
    Imtl 8.343 10 If truth live, I live; if justice live, I live, said one of the old saints;...
    Dem1 10.16 19 In the popular belief, ghosts are a selecting tribe, avoiding millions, speaking to one. In our traditions, fairies, angels and saints show the like favoritism;...
    Aris 10.31 19 [The best young men] do not yet covet political power...nor do they wish to be saints;...
    Aris 10.51 8 We do not expect [public representatives] to be saints...
    Chr2 10.90 6 For what need I of book or priest/ Or Sibyl from the mummied East/ When every star is Bethlehem Star,-/ I count as many as there are/ Cinquefoils or violets in the grass,/ So many saints and saviours,/ So many high behaviours./
    Chr2 10.98 1 We affirm that in all men is this majestic [moral] perception and command;...that it distances and degrades all statements of whatever saints, heroes, poets, as obscure and confused stammerings before its silent revelation.
    Chr2 10.110 10 Socrates and Marcus Aurelius are allowed to be saints;...
    Supl 10.169 5 Spartans, stoics, heroes, saints and gods use a short and positive speech.
    SovE 10.203 18 The Church of Rome had its saints, and inspired the conscience of Europe...
    SovE 10.205 21 If I miss the inspiration of the saints of Calvinism, or of Platonism, or Buddhism, our times are not up to theirs...
    SovE 10.207 5 ...new views of inspiration, of miracles, of the saints, have supplanted the old opinions...
    Prch 10.224 7 ...all that saints and churches and Bibles...have aimed at, is to suppress this impertinent surface-action...
    Prch 10.228 26 What sort of respect can these preachers or newspapers inspire by their weekly praises of texts and saints, when we know that they would say just the same things if Beelzebub had written the chapter, provided it stood where it does in the public opinion?
    LLNE 10.327 9 [The new race] rebel...against mediation, or saints, or any nobility in the unseen.
    LLNE 10.337 1 ...every lesson of humility, or justice, or charity, which the old ignorant saints had taught [man], was still forever true.
    HDC 11.47 8 He is ill informed who expects, on running down the [New England] Town Records for two hundred years, to find a church of saints...
    FSLC 11.181 11 ...saints, and brokers...not so much as a snatch of an old song for freedom, dares intrude on their passive obedience [to the Fugitive Slave Law].
    FRO2 11.488 26 We cannot spare the vision nor the virtue of the saints;...
    MAng1 12.234 5 [Michelangelo] did not only build a divine temple, and paint and carve saints and prophets. He lived out the same inspiration.
    WSL 12.342 26 It is vain to call [the literary spirit] a luxury, and as saints and reformers are apt to do, decry it as a species of day-dreaming.

Saints, n. (3)

    DSA 1.145 23 Friends enough you shall find who will hold up to your emulation...Saints and Prophets.
    LS 11.15 7 Elsewhere [St. Paul] tells [the primitive Church] that at that time [the second coming of Christ], the world would be burnt up with fire, and a new government established, in which the Saints would sit on thrones;...
    II 12.88 16 Our books are full of generous biographies of Saints, who knew not that they were such;...

saint's, n. (3)

    Int 2.341 19 A self-denial no less austere than the saint's is demanded of the scholar.
    ShP 4.210 26 ...the occasion which gave the saint's meaning the form of a conversation...is immaterial compared with the universality of its application.
    ET16 5.288 2 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.

Saints', n. (1)

    Hist 2.12 9 When we have gone through this process, and added thereto the Catholic Church...its Saints' days and image-worship, we have as it were been the man that made the minster;...

Saint-Simon, Duc de [Louis [Saint-Simon,] (2)

    NER 3.264 1 Following or advancing beyond the ideas of St. Simon, of Fourier, and of Owen, three communities have already been formed in Massachusetts on kindred plans...
    bhr 6.182 23 A calm and resolute bearing...and the art of hiding all uncomfortable feeling, are essential to the courtier; and Saint Simon and Cardinal de Retz and Roederer and an encyclopaedia of Memoires will instruct you...in those potent secrets.

Saint-Simon's, Claude Henr (1)

    Res 8.142 9 Resources of America! why, one thinks of Saint-Simon's saying, The Golden Age is not behind, but before you.

saith, v. (16)

    Nat 1.39 26 ...up to the hour when he saith, Thy will be done! [man] is learning the secret that he can...conform all facts to his character.
    Nat 1.62 19 Idealism saith: matter is a phenomenon, not a substance.
    DSA 1.144 11 [Man] saith yea and nay, only.
    Con 1.297 21 That which is was made by God, saith Conservatism.
    Tran 1.342 17 ...[Society] saith, Whoso goes to walk alone, accuses the whole world;...
    Comp 2.126 2 The voice of the Almighty saith, Up and onward for evermore!
    OS 2.269 22 ...by yielding to the spirit of prophecy which is innate in every man, we can know what [the soul] saith.
    OS 2.296 18 Behold, [the soul] saith, I am born into the great, the universal mind.
    Int 2.327 27 Whatever any mind doth or saith is after a law...
    NER 3.283 18 Work, [the Law] saith to man, in every hour, paid or unpaid, see only that thou work...
    Wsp 6.214 7 The Spirit saith to the man, How is it with thee? thee personally?...
    PI 8.64 27 [Poetry] is the piety of the intellect. Thus saith the Lord, should begin the song.
    Chr2 10.97 6 In all ages, to all men, [the moral force] saith, I am;...
    HDC 11.52 6 At a meeting which Eliot gave to the squaws apart, the wife of Wampooas propounded the question, Whether do I pray when my husband prays, if I speak nothing as he doth, yet if I like what he saith?...
    MLit 12.313 14 Accustomed always to behold the presence of the universe in every part, the soul will not condescend to look at any new part as a stranger, but saith,-I know all already and what art thou?
    Pray 12.354 15 That my weak hand may equal my firm faith,/ And my life practise more than my tongue saith;/ That my low conduct may not show,/ Nor my relenting lines,/ That I thy purpose did not know,/ Or overrated thy designs./

sake, n. (34)

    AmS 1.95 20 I do not see how any man can afford, for the sake of his nerves and his nap, to spare any action in which he can partake.
    AmS 1.100 10 ...a man shall not for the sake of wider activity sacrifice any opinion to the popular judgments and modes of action.
    DSA 1.148 14 ...we shall resist for truth's sake the freest flow of kindness...
    MN 1.210 4 ...if [a man's] eye is set...not on the truth that is still taught, and for the sake of which the things are to be done, then the voice grows faint...
    Tran 1.343 14 ...[Transcendentalists] will own...that there are...persons whose faces are perhaps unknown to them, but whose fame and spirit have penetrated their solitude,-and for whose sake they wish to exist.
    SL 2.154 21 There are not in the world at any one time more than a dozen persons who read and understand Plato,--never enough to pay for an edition of his works; yet to every generation these come duly down, for the sake of those few persons...
    Prd1 2.224 5 If a man...immerse himself in any trades or pleasures for their own sake, he may be a good wheel or pin, but he is not a cultivated man.
    OS 2.278 1 ...the best minds, who love truth for its own sake, think much less of property in truth.
    Cir 2.314 6 ...these metals and animals, which seem to stand there for their own sake, are means and methods only...
    Int 2.326 6 Intellect...discerns [the fact] as if it existed for its own sake.
    Nat2 3.175 10 To the poor young poet, thus fabulous is his picture of society; he is loyal; he respects the rich; they are rich for the sake of his imagination;...
    NR 3.223 10 Not less are summer mornings dear/ To every child they wake,/ And each with novel life his sphere/ Fills for his proper sake./
    PPh 4.57 3 All things are for the sake of the good, and it is the cause of every thing beautiful. This dogma animates and impersonates [Plato's] philosophy.
    PPh 4.63 5 [Dialectic] is of that rank [said Plato] that no intellectual man will enter on any study for its own sake...
    GoW 4.280 26 In France there is even a greater delight in intellectual brilliancy for its own sake.
    GoW 4.284 10 [Goethe's] is not even the devotion to pure truth; but to truth for the sake of culture.
    ET11 5.193 21 [English noblemen] will not let [their houses], for pride's sake...
    ET13 5.231 4 ...if religion be the doing of all good, and for its sake the suffering of all evil...that divine secret has existed in England from the days of Alfred...
    Ctr 6.135 4 ...if a man seeks a companion who can look at objects for their own sake and without affection or self-reference, he will find the fewest who will give him that satisfaction;...
    Wsp 6.225 26 In every variety of human employment...there are...those... who finish their task for its own sake;...
    Cour 7.265 13 Bodily pain is superficial, seated usually in the skin and the extremities, for the sake of giving us warning to put us on our guard;...
    Elo2 8.121 23 ...Saadi tells us that a person with a disagreeable voice was reading the Koran aloud, when a holy man, passing by, asked what was his monthly stipend. He answered, Nothing at all. But why then do you take so much trouble? He replied, I read for the sake of God.
    Elo2 8.121 24 ...Saadi tells us that a person with a disagreeable voice was reading the Koran aloud, when a holy man, passing by, asked what was his monthly stipend. He answered, Nothing at all. But why then do you take so much trouble? He replied, I read for the sake of God. The other rejoined, For God's sake, do not read; for if you read the Koran in this manner you will destroy the splendor of Islamism.
    PC 8.230 2 Talent for talent's sake is a bauble and a show.
    PPo 8.248 25 Wrong shall not be wrong to Hafiz for the name's sake.
    Imtl 8.338 16 I do not wish to live for the sake of my warm house...
    Aris 10.32 5 A reference to society is part of the idea of culture; science of a gentleman; art of a gentleman; poetry in a gentleman: intellectually held, that is, for their own sake...
    Chr2 10.96 13 ...there is...many a man who does not hesitate to lay down his life for the sake of a truth...
    Schr 10.271 22 ...[genius and virtue] are the First Good, of which Plato affirms that all things are for its sake...
    EWI 11.144 5 ...if the black man carries in his bosom an indispensable element of a new and coming civilization; for the sake of that element, no wrong nor strength nor circumstance can hurt him...
    FRep 11.519 11 Man exists for his own sake, and not to add a laborer to the state.
    FRep 11.519 25 Our great men succumb so far to the forms of the day as to peril their integrity for the sake of adding to the weight of their personal character the authority of office...
    CInt 12.118 9 Society is always taken by surprise at any new example of common sense and of simple justice, as at a wonderful discovery. Thus, at... Garibaldi's emancipation of Italy for Italy's sake;...
    MAng1 12.229 7 It does not fall within our design to give an account of [Michelangelo's] works, yet for the sake of the completeness of our sketch we will name the principle ones.

salad, n. (1)

    Nat2 3.195 16 They say that by electro-magnetism your salad shall be grown from the seed whilst your fowl is roasting for dinner;...

Saladin, n. (4)

    Con 1.317 6 ...the vigor of...Saladin the Kurd...sufficed to build what you call society on the spot and in the instant when the sound mind in a sound body appeared.
    Mrs1 3.125 9 The famous gentlemen of Asia and Europe have been of this strong type; Saladin, Sapor...
    Cour 7.271 22 ...Richard and Saladin...become aware that they are nearer and more alike than any other two...
    MMEm 10.428 20 Saladin caused his shroud to be made, and carried it to battle as his standard.

salads, n. (2)

    Nat2 3.195 22 ...man's life is but seventy salads long, grow they swift or grow they slow.
    Wsp 6.232 13 It is strange that superior persons should not feel that they have some better resistance against cholera than avoiding green peas and salads.

Salamis, Cyprus, n. (1)

    Cour 7.256 4 What an ado we make through two thousand years about Thermopylae and Salamis!

salaries, n. (2)

    Wth 6.108 19 All salaries are reckoned on contingent as well as on actual services.
    Bost 12.202 18 The soul of a political party is by no means usually the officers and pets of the party, who...spend the salaries.

salary, n. (4)

    Chr1 3.104 16 The true charity of Goethe is to be inferred from the account he gave Dr. Eckermann of the way in which he had spent his fortune. Each bonmot of mine has cost a purse of gold. Half a million of my own money... my salary...have been expended to instruct me in what I now know.
    SwM 4.100 11 Later, [Swedenborg] resigned his office of Assessor: the salary attached to this office continued to be paid to him during his life.
    Wth 6.118 17 A farm is a good thing when it...does not need a salary or a shop to eke it out.
    Cour 7.253 24 [Self-Sacrifice] makes the renown...of Washington, giving his service to the public without salary or reward.

sale, n. (14)

    YA 1.378 9 Trade goes...to bring every kind of faculty of every individual that can in any manner serve any person, on sale.
    PPh 4.73 3 ...it is said that to procure the pleasure, which he loves, of talking at his ease all day with the most elegant and cultivated young men, [Socrates] will now and then return to his shop and carve statues, good or bad, for sale.
    ET11 5.192 7 The sycophancy and sale of votes and honor, for place and title; lewdness, gaming, smuggling, bribery and cheating;...make the reader pause and explore the firm bounds which [in England] confined these vices to a handful of rich men.
    Civ 7.23 10 The division of labor...fills the State with useful and happy laborers; and they, creating demand by the very temptation of their productions, are rapidly and surely rewarded by good sale...
    Boks 7.209 19 In May, 1812, the library of the Duke of Roxburgh was sold. The sale lasted forty-two days...
    Boks 7.209 24 Among the distinguished company which attended the sale [of the Duke of Roxburgh's library] were the Duke of Devonshire, Earl Spencer, and the Duke of Marlborough...
    Suc 7.290 13 I hate this shallow Americanism which hopes...to learn...the sale of goods through pretending that they sell...
    Chr2 10.114 13 Men will learn to put back the emphasis peremptorily on pure morals...with no sale of indulgences...
    LLNE 10.344 5 ...some numbers [of The Dial] had an instant exhausting sale, because of papers by Theodore Parker.
    MMEm 10.417 14 ...Malden [alluding to the sale of her farm]. Last night I [Mary Moody Emerson] spoke two sentences about that foolish place...
    MMEm 10.418 4 Happy beginning of my [Mary Moody Emerson's] bargain, though the sale of the place [Elm Vale] appears to me one of the worst things for me at this time.
    EWI 11.108 6 John Woolman of New Jersey...was uneasy in his mind when he was set to write a bill of sale of a negro, for his master.
    EWI 11.123 15 ...we...have acquired the vices and virtues that belong to trade. We peddle...we go in canals,-to market, and for the sale of goods.
    Wom 11.420 15 On the questions that are important...whether the unlimited sale of cheap liquors shall be allowed;-[women] would give, I suppose, as intelligent a vote as the voters of Boston or New York.

Salem, Massachusetts, adj. (1)

    Hist 2.10 24 We must in ourselves see the necessary reason of every fact,-- see how it could and must be. So stand...before a...Salem hanging of witches;...

Salem, Massachusetts, n. (4)

    Pt1 3.16 18 In the political processions, Lowell goes in a loom...and Salem in a ship.
    Elo2 8.127 13 ...when once going to preach the Thursday lecture in Boston (which in those days people walked from Salem to hear), on going up the pulpit-stairs [Dr. Charles Chauncy] was informed that a little boy had fallen into Frog Pond on the Common and was drowned...
    EzRy 10.382 26 There were an unusually large number of distinguished men in this [Harvard] class of 1776...the late learned Dr. Prince of Salem.
    Bost 12.191 11 ...the weariness of the sea, the shrinking from cold weather and the pangs of hunger must justify [the Plymouth colonists]. But the next colony planted itself at Salem...

sales, n. (1)

    AgMs 12.363 4 [The Agricultural Surveyor] is the victim of the Reports, which are sent him, of particular farms. He cannot go behind the estimates to know how the contracts were made, and how the sales were effected.

salesman, n. (2)

    UGM 4.19 19 [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...
    Elo1 7.74 9 There is the glib tongue and cool self-possession of the salesman in a large shop...

saliency, n. (3)

    PI 8.72 9 The habit of saliency...is a sort of importation or domestication of the Divine effort in a man.
    PLT 12.59 14 The habit of saliency...is a sort of importation and domestication of the divine effort into a man.
    CL 12.163 20 What alone possesses interest for us is the naturel of each man. This is that which is the saliency, or principle of levity...

saliens, adj. (1)

    Bost 12.188 11 Linnaeus...called London the punctum saliens in the yolk of the world.

salient, adj. (4)

    Con 1.297 19 Innovation is the salient energy;...
    ET14 5.258 14 ...[the Oxonian] does not value the salient and curative influence of intellectual action...
    Bty 6.302 23 ...[the human form] is not only admirable in singular and salient talents, but also in the world of manners.
    Schr 10.283 24 ...trusted and obeyed in happy natures [mother-wit] becomes active and salient...

Salisbury Cathedral, Englan (4)

    ET4 5.66 6 The bronze monuments of crusaders lying cross-legged in the Temple Church at London, and those in Worcester and in Salisbury cathedrals...are of the same type as the best youthful heads of men now in England;...
    ET16 5.285 14 The [Salisbury] Cathedral, which was finished six hundred years ago, has even a spruce and modern air...
    ET16 5.285 21 Salisbury [Cathedral] is now esteemed the culmination of the Gothic art in England...
    ET16 5.285 25 The interior of the [Salisbury] Cathedral is obstructed by the organ in the middle...

Salisbury, Earl of, [Robert (1)

    Grts 8.311 10 He can toil terribly, said Cecil of Sir Walter Raleigh.

Salisbury, England, n. (3)

    ET16 5.273 18 On Friday, 7th July, we [Emerson and Carlyle] took the South Western Railway through Hampshire to Salisbury...
    ET16 5.276 4 We [Emerson and Carlyle] left the train at Salisbury and took a carriage to Amesbury...
    ET16 5.285 14 On leaving Wilton House, we [Emerson and Carlyle] took the coach for Salisbury.

Salisbury Plain, England, n (2)

    ET16 5.276 9 After dinner we [Emerson and Carlyle] walked to Salisbury Plain.
    ET16 5.281 25 [Stukeley] finds that the cursus on Salisbury Plain stretches across the downs like a line of latitude upon the globe...

Salisbury's, Earl of [Rober (1)

    uGM 4.14 4 Cecil's saying of Sir Walter Raleigh, I know that he can toil terribly, is an electric touch.

saliva, n. (1)

    ET3 5.39 20 In the manufacturing towns [of England], the fine soot or blacks...discolor the human saliva...

sallies, n. (17)

    Nat 1.66 16 ...the best read naturalist who lends an entire and devout attention to truth, will see that there remains much to learn of his relation to the world, and that it...is arrived at by untaught sallies of the spirit...
    DSA 1.130 25 ...[Jesus's] name is surrounded with expressions which were once sallies of admiration and love...
    LE 1.180 7 ...[Napoleon] had a sublime confidence...in the sallies of courage...
    Tran 1.356 26 [The Transcendentalist] is braced-up and stilted;...all sallies of wit and frolic nature are quite out of the question;...
    SR 2.58 6 All the sallies of [a man's] will are rounded in by the law of his being...
    Fdsp 2.206 5 [Friendship] keeps company with the sallies of the wit...
    Exp 3.81 11 We must hold hard to this poverty...and by more vigorous self-recoveries, after the sallies of action, possess our axis more firmly.
    ET5 5.80 8 [The English]...cannot conceal their contempt for sallies of thought...
    ET12 5.212 23 ...I should as soon think of quarrelling with the janitor for not magnifying his office by hostile sallies into the street...as of quarrelling with the professors for not admiring the young neologists who pluck the beards of Euclid and Aristotle...
    F 6.29 9 A text of heroism, a name and anecdote of courage, are not arguments but sallies of freedom.
    Wth 6.116 26 Nature goes by rule, not by sallies and saltations.
    Bhr 6.185 22 ...the movements of Blanche are the sallies of a spirit which is sufficient for the moment...
    Clbs 7.232 17 Some men love only to talk where they are masters. They like to go...into the shops where the sauntering people gladly lend an ear to any one. On these terms they...please themselves by sallies and chat...
    Chr2 10.110 14 The time will come, says Varnhagen von Ense, when we shall treat the jokes and sallies against the myths and church-rituals of Christianity...good-naturedly...
    Edc1 10.136 22 ...let not the sallies of [the young man's] petulance or folly be checked with disgust or indignation or despair.
    PLT 12.37 6 In its lower function, when it deals with the apparent world, [Instinct] is common sense. It requires the performance of all that is needful to the animal life and health. Then it...requires...that symmetry and connection which is imperative in all healthily constituted men, and the want of which the rare and brilliant sallies of irregular genius cannot excuse.
    PLT 12.59 13 [A fact] is...only a means now to new sallies of the imagination and new progress of wisdom.

sally, n. (7)

    Nat 1.74 16 Is not prayer also...a sally of the soul into the unfound infinite?
    NER 3.261 22 It is handsomer to remain in the establishment better than the establishment, and to conduct that in the best manner, than to make a sally against evil by some single improvement, without supporting it by a total regeneration.
    PPh 4.71 5 Socrates, a man...of a personal homeliness so remarkable as to be a cause of wit in others:--the rather that his broad good nature and exquisite taste for a joke invited the sally...
    ET14 5.232 21 The [English] poet nimbly recovers himself from every sally of the imagination.
    Supl 10.171 26 If man loves the conditioned, he also loves the unconditioned. We don't wish...to check the invention of wit or the sally of humor.
    EPro 11.315 10 Every step in the history of political liberty is a sally of the human mind into the untried Future...
    Milt1 12.278 10 [Milton's plea for freedom of divorce] was a sally of the extravagant spirit of the time...

Salmasius, Claudius [Claude (2)

    Milt1 12.250 14 To insult Salmasius, not to acquit England, is the main design [of Milton's Defence of the English People].
    Milt1 12.250 17 What under heaven had...the manner of living of Saumaise...to do with the solemn question whether Charles Stuart had been rightly slain?

Salmasius [Saumaise], Madam (1)

    Milt1 12.250 16 What under heaven had Madame de Saumaise...to do with the solemn question whether Charles Stuart had been rightly slain?

salmon, n. (3)

    ET3 5.39 8 The rivers [in England] and the surrounding sea spawn with fish; there are salmon for the rich and sprats and herrings for the poor.
    ET5 5.95 11 The rivers, lakes and ponds [in England]...are artificially filled with the eggs of salmon, turbot and herring.
    HDC 11.36 16 ...in winter, [the Indians] sat around holes in the ice, catching salmon, pickeral, breams and perch...

salons, n. (2)

    LE 1.176 18 How mean to go blazing...in fashionable or political salons...
    YA 1.380 16 In Paris, the blouse, the badge of the operative, has begun to make its appearance in the salons.

saloon, n. (1)

    MLit 12.335 10 In the gay saloon [man] laments that these figures are not what Raphael and Guercino painted.

saloons, n. (10)

    Mrs1 3.131 17 There is almost no kind of self-reliance...which fashion does not occasionally adopt and give it the freedom of its saloons.
    Nat2 3.175 14 That [the rich] have some high-fenced grove which they call a park; that they live in larger and better-garnished saloons than he has visited...these make the groundwork from which [the poor young poet] has delineated estates of romance...
    NER 3.257 3 ...I do not like the close air of saloons.
    PPh 4.53 18 The Roman legion...the saloons of Versailles...may all be seen in perspective;...
    Wth 6.114 10 Pride...can talk with poor men, or sit silent well contented in fine saloons.
    Ctr 6.149 22 ...it requires a great many cultivated women,--saloons of bright, elegant, reading women...in order that you should have one Madame de Stael.
    SS 7.7 23 The ministers of beauty are rarely beautiful in coaches and saloons.
    Aris 10.38 11 ...in orchard and farm, and even in saloons, they only prosper or they prosper best who have a military mind...
    MoL 10.243 8 ...stray clergymen kept the bar in saloons [in California];...
    MMEm 10.409 16 ...from the rays which burst forth when the crowd are entering these noble saloons, whilst I [Mary Moody Emerson] stand in the doors, I get a pleasing vision which is an earnest of the interminable skies where the mansions are prepared for the poor.

salt, adj. (9)

    Art1 2.361 18 [At Naples] I...said to myself--Thou foolish child, hast thou come out hither, over four thousand miles of salt water, to find that which was perfect to thee there at home?
    UGM 4.6 7 It is easy...to nitre to be salt.
    Civ 7.25 3 ...I watched, in crossing the sea, the beautiful skill whereby the engine in its constant working was made to produce two hundred gallons of fresh water out of salt water, every hour...
    Civ 7.25 13 The skill that pervades complex details;...the very prison compelled to maintain itself...and better still, made a reform school and a manufactory of honest men out of rogues, as the steamer made fresh water out of salt,--these are examples of that tendency to combine antagonisms... which is the index of high civilization.
    Suc 7.306 9 ...the springs of justice and courage do not fail any more than salt or sulphur springs.
    Supl 10.174 1 ...these raptures of fire and frost, which...make the speech salt and biting, would cost me the days of well-being which are now so cheap to me, yet so valued.
    Thor 10.482 25 I put on some hemlock-boughs, and the rich salt crackling of their leaves was like mustard to the ear...
    EWI 11.111 8 [The West Indian slave] was worked sixteen hours, and his ration by law, in some islands, was a pint of flour and one salt herring a day.
    Trag 12.405 3 As the salt sea covers more than two thirds of the surface of the globe, so sorrow encroaches in man on felicity.

salt, n. (17)

    MR 1.251 20 ...[Caliph Omar's] sauce was salt;...
    MR 1.251 21 ...oftentimes by way of abstinence [Caliph Omar] ate his bread without salt.
    Prd1 2.225 20 I want wood or oil, or meal or salt;...
    Int 2.325 4 Water dissolves wood and iron and salt;...
    Mrs1 3.120 5 ...the salt, the dates, the ivory, and the gold, for which these horrible regions are visited, find their way into countries where the purchaser and consumer can hardly be ranked in one race with these cannibals and man-stealers;...
    Mrs1 3.137 27 Must we have a good understanding with one another's palates? as foolish people who have lived long together know when each wants salt or sugar.
    PPh 4.76 16 The qualities of sugar remain with sugar, and those of salt with salt.
    MoS 4.152 1 The trade in our streets...thinks nothing of the force which necessitated traders and a trading planet to exist: no, but sticks to cotton, sugar, wool and salt.
    MoS 4.162 1 ...some stark and sufficient man, who is not salt or sugar...is the fit person to occupy this ground of speculation.
    ET3 5.39 3 [England] has plenty...of salt and of iron.
    ET5 5.80 13 ...[the English] have a supreme eye to facts, and theirs is a logic that brings salt to soup...
    ET5 5.84 1 [The English] apply themselves...to fishery, to manufacture of indispensable staples,--salt, plumbago, leather, wool, glass, pottery and brick...
    SS 7.6 4 Those constitutions which can bear in open day the rough dealing of the world must be of that mean and average structure such as iron and salt...
    Farm 7.149 9 As [the farmer] nursed his Thanksgiving turkeys on bread and milk, so he will pamper his peaches and grapes on the viands they like best. If they have an appetite for potash, or salt...he will indulge them.
    SA 8.97 11 ...there are...swainish, morose people...and though their odd wit may have some salt for you, your friends would not relish it.
    Imtl 8.340 9 Salt is a good preserver; cold is...
    Trag 12.407 19 ...universally, in uneducated and unreflecting persons...we discover traits of the same superstition [belief in Fate]:...if you count ten stars you will fall down dead; if you spill the salt;...

salt, v. (1)

    Prd1 2.226 15 [The northerner] must brew, bake, salt and preserve his food...

saltations, n. (3)

    LE 1.180 25 ...when all tactics had come to an end then [Napoleon]... availed himself of the mighty saltations of the most formidable soldiers in nature.
    Wth 6.116 26 Nature goes by rule, not by sallies and saltations.
    PI 8.72 6 The number of successive saltations the nimble thought can make, measures the difference between the highest and lowest of mankind.

saltatory, adj. (1)

    Exp 3.68 8 ...[nature's] methods are saltatory and impulsive.

salted, v. (1)

    Thor 10.482 13 The chub is a soft fish, and tastes like boiled brown paper salted.

salts, n. (1)

    PLT 12.11 3 The wonder of the science of Intellect is that the substance with which we deal is of that subtle and active quality that it intoxicates all who approach it. Gloves on the hands...volatile salts in the nostrils, are no defence against this virus...

salubrity, n. (1)

    CbW 6.243 19 Live in the sunshine, swim the sea,/ Drink the wild air's salubrity/...

Salust, n. (1)

    Nat 1.20 12 All those things for which men plough, build, or sail, obey virtue; said Salust.

salutary, adj. (4)

    ET2 5.26 7 I wanted a change and a tonic, and England was proposed to me. Besides, there were at least the dread attraction and salutary influences of the sea.
    II 12.75 23 Our teaching is indeed hazardous and rare. Our only security is in our rectitude, whose influences must be salutary.
    Bost 12.195 7 I trace to this deep religious sentiment and to its culture great and salutary results to the people of New England;...
    WSL 12.345 17 What is the quality of the persons who...have a certain salutary omnipresence in all our life's history...

salutations, n. (2)

    SL 2.159 7 There is confession...in salutations...
    SL 2.160 25 ...why need you torment yourself and friend by secret self-reproaches that you have not...complimented him with gifts and salutations heretofore?

salute, n. (2)

    LE 1.178 26 On coming on board the Bellerophon, a file of English soldiers drawn up on deck gave [Napoleon] a military salute.
    MR 1.252 20 See this wide society of laboring men and women. We allow ourselves to be served by them, we...meet them without a salute in the streets.

salute, v. (1)

    PI 8.62 20 ...said Merlin...salute for me the king and the queen and all the barons...

saluted, v. (2)

    LT 1.274 5 [The wealthy man] entertains [the divine]...lodges him; his religion comes home at night, prays, is...sumptuously laid to sleep; rises, is saluted......
    Chr1 3.107 26 There is a class of men...so eminently endowed with insight and virtue that they have been unanimously saluted as divine...

salutes, n. (1)

    Ctr 6.154 24 How can you mind diet, bed, dress, or salutes or compliments...when you think how paltry are the machinery and the workers?

salvage, adj. (1)

    Bost 12.189 25 [John Smith writes (1624)] Here [in New England] are many isles planted with corn, groves, mulberries, salvage gardens and good harbours.

salvage, n. (1)

    Elo1 7.87 5 ...[the state's attorney] revenged himself...on the judge, by requiring the court to define what salvage was.

salvation, n. (12)

    Tran 1.348 23 ...the good and wise must...carry salvation to the combatants and demagogues in the dusty arena below.
    NER 3.252 7 [The Sabbath and Bible Conventions] defied each other, like a congress of kings, each of whom had...a way of his own that made concert unprofitable. What a fertility of projects for the salvation of the world!
    NMW 4.250 12 In 1806 [Napoleon] conversed with Fournier, bishop of Montpellier, on matters of theology. There were two points on which they could not agree, viz. that of hell, and that of salvation out of the pale of the church.
    SS 7.8 21 ...all our youth is a reconnoitring and recruiting of the holy fraternity [friendships] shall combine for the salvation of men.
    WD 7.164 11 ...we must look deeper for our salvation than to steam, photographs, balloons or astronomy.
    Cour 7.257 11 ...mothers say the salvation of the life and health of a young child is a perpetual miracle.
    GSt 10.506 25 ...when I consider that [George Stearns] lived long enough to see with his own eyes the salvation of his country...I count him happy among men.
    EWI 11.103 11 ...when [the negro] sank in the furrow...no priest of salvation visited him with glad tidings...
    TPar 11.291 15 Fops, whether in hotels or churches, will...faintly hope for the salvation of [Theodore Parker's] soul;...
    ALin 11.337 7 Easy good nature has been the dangerous foible of the Republic, and it was necessary that its enemies should...drive us to unwonted firmness, to secure the salvation of this country in the next ages.
    PPr 12.387 1 ...the splendor of wit cannot outdazzle the calm daylight, which always shows every individual man in balance with his age, and able to work out his own salvation from all the follies of that...
    PPr 12.389 22 [Carlyle] is like a lover or an outlaw who wraps up his message in a serenade, which is nonsense to the sentinel, but salvation to the ear for which it is meant.

salvos, n. (2)

    ET4 5.51 9 Everything English is a fusion of distant and antagonistic elements. The language is mixed;...a country of extemes...nothing can be praised in it without damning exceptions, and nothing denounced without salvos of cordial praise.
    FSLC 11.202 6 [Webster] must learn...that he who was their pride in the woods and mountains of New England is now their mortification...they have thrust his speeches into the chimney. No roars of New York mobs can drown this voice in Mr. Webster's ear. It will outwhisper all the salvos of the Union Committees' cannon.

Samarcand, Persia, n. (1)

    PPo 8.251 19 Take my heart in thy hand, O beautiful boy of Shiraz!/ I would give for the mole on thy cheek Samarcand and Buchara!/

Samaria, n. (1)

    LS 11.10 6 [Jesus] instructed the woman of Samaria respecting living water.

same, adj. (727)

    Nat 1.5 11 Art is applied to the mixture of [man's] will with the same things [unchanged essences]...
    Nat 1.11 9 ...the same scene which yesterday breathed perfume and glittered as for the frolic of the nymphs is overspread with melancholy to-day.
    Nat 1.13 18 The useful arts are reproductions or new combinations by the wit of man, of the same natural benefactors.
    Nat 1.18 14 ...in the same field, [the attentive eye] beholds, every hour, a picture which was never seen before...
    Nat 1.23 12 Others have the same love [of nature] in such excess, that... they seek to embody it in new forms.
    Nat 1.24 21 Truth, and goodness, and beauty, are but different faces of the same All.
    Nat 1.26 4 Most of the process by which this transformation [from thing to word] is made, is hidden from us in the remote time when language was framed; but the same tendency may be daily observed in children.
    Nat 1.29 9 The same symbols are found to make the original elements of all languages.
    Nat 1.35 12 Every scripture is to be interpreted by the same spirit which gave it forth...
    Nat 1.37 15 The same good office is performed by Property...
    Nat 1.42 12 ...the sailor, the shepherd, the miner, the merchant...have each an experience...leading to the same conclusion...
    Nat 1.43 9 [Xenophanes] was weary of seeing the same entity in the tedious variety of forms.
    Nat 1.47 21 The relations of parts and the end of the whole remaining the same, what is the difference, whether land and sea interact...or whether, without relations of time and space, the same appearances are inscribed in the constant faith of man?
    Nat 1.48 4 ...what is the difference, whether...worlds revolve and intermingle without number or end...or whether, without relations of time and space, the same appearances are inscribed in the constant faith of man?
    Nat 1.51 23 In a higher manner the poet communicates the same pleasure.
    Nat 1.64 25 The world proceeds from the same spirit as the body of man.
    Nat 1.74 21 ...when a faithful thinker, resolute to detach every object from personal relations and see it in the light of thought, shall, at the same time, kindle science with the fire of the holiest affections, then will God go forth anew...
    AmS 1.110 18 ...the same movement which effected the elevation of what was called the lowest class in the state, assumed in literature a very marked...aspect.
    DSA 1.124 10 ...all things proceed out of this same spirit...
    DSA 1.124 14 All things proceed out of the same spirit...
    DSA 1.129 6 ...what a distortion did [Jesus's] doctrine and memory suffer in the same, in the next, and the following ages!
    DSA 1.134 15 ...it is the effect of conversation with the beauty of the soul, to beget a desire and need to impart to others the same knowledge and love.
    LE 1.163 11 ...in the great idea and the puny execution;-behold Charles the Fifth's day; another, yet the same;...
    LE 1.173 14 Having thus spoken of the resources and the subject of the scholar, out of the same faith proceeds also the rule of his ambition and life.
    MN 1.196 13 ...if you come month after month to see what progress our reformer has made...you still find him...floating about in new parts of the same old vein or crust.
    MN 1.205 5 The ocean is everywhere the same...
    MN 1.214 15 You cannot bathe twice in the same river, said Heraclitus;...
    MN 1.214 17 ...a man never sees the same object twice...
    MN 1.214 19 Does not the same law hold for virtue?
    MR 1.229 21 The fact that a new thought and hope have dawned in your breast, should apprize you that in the same hour a new light broke in upon a thousand private hearts.
    MR 1.230 10 That fancy [the scholar] had, and hesitated to utter because you would laugh,-the broker, the attorney, the market-man are saying the same thing.
    MR 1.237 22 ...it is...the hunter, and the planter, who have intercepted...the cotton of the cotton. They have got the education, I only the commodity. This were all very well if I were necessarily absent, being detained by... work of the same faculties;...
    MR 1.249 13 ...if, at the same time, a woman or a child discovers a sentiment of piety...I ought to confess it by my respect and obedience...
    LT 1.269 14 The leaders of the crusades against War, Negro slavery...are the right successors of Luther...and Whitefield. They have the same virtues and vices;...
    LT 1.269 14 The leaders of the crusades against War, Negro slavery...are the right successors of Luther...and Whitefield. They have...the same noble impulse, and the same bigotry.
    LT 1.269 15 The leaders of the crusades against War, Negro slavery...are the right successors of Luther...and Whitefield. They have...the same noble impulse, and the same bigotry.
    LT 1.274 26 Grimly the same spirit [of Reform] looks into the law of Property...
    LT 1.277 23 [The work of the reformer] is done in the same way [as other work], it is done profanely, not piously;...
    LT 1.282 15 We do not find the same trait [of perplexity] in the Arabian, in the Hebrew...periods;...
    LT 1.284 20 I have seen the same gloom on the brow even of those adventurers from the intellectual class who had dived deepest and with most success into active life.
    Con 1.300 9 ...the superior beauty is with...the river which ever flowing yet is found in the same bed from age to age;...
    Con 1.304 7 ...[the system of property and law] is the fruit of the same mysterious cause as the mineral or animal world.
    Con 1.305 19 You quarrel with my conservatism, but it is to build up one of your own; it will have a new beginning, but the same course and end...
    Con 1.305 20 You quarrel with my conservatism, but it is to build up one of your own; it will have a new beginning, but...the same trials, the same passions;...
    Con 1.310 6 ...precisely the defence which was set up for the British Constitution, namely that...it worked well...the same defence is set up for the existing institutions.
    Con 1.310 18 [Existing institutions] really have so much flexibility as to afford your talent and character...the same chance of demonstration and success which they might have if there was no law and no property.
    Con 1.320 21 ...if [the people] are not instructed to sympathize with the intelligent, reading, trading, and governing class; inspired with a taste for the same competitions and prizes, they will upset the fair pageant of Judicature...
    Con 1.320 25 Religion is taught in the same spirit.
    Tran 1.330 11 ...I, [the idealist] says, affirm...facts which are of the same nature as the faculty which reports them...
    Tran 1.339 10 ...genius and virtue predict in man the same absence of private ends and of condescension to circumstances...
    Tran 1.354 22 In the eternal trinity of Truth, Goodness, and Beauty... [Transcendentalists] prefer to make Beauty the sign and head. Something of the same taste is observable in all the moral movements of the time...
    Tran 1.355 17 ...we are tempted to smile, and we flee from the working to the speculative reformer, to escape that same slight ridicule.
    YA 1.363 7 America is beginning to assert herself to the senses and to the imagination of her children, and Europe is receding in the same degree.
    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.
    YA 1.372 8 All the facts in any part of nature shall be tabulated and the results shall indicate the same security and benefit;...
    YA 1.375 24 Fathers...behold with impatience a new character and way of thinking presuming to show itself in their own son or daughter. This feeling...becomes petulance and tyranny when...the emperor of an empire, deals with the same difference of opinion in his subjects.
    YA 1.379 3 ...the aristocracy of trade...was...the result of merit of some kind, and is continually falling...before new claims of the same sort.
    YA 1.381 19 ...the farmer is living in the same town with men who pretend to know exactly what he wants.
    YA 1.383 3 The Community is only the continuation of the same movement which made the joint-stock companies for manufactures, mining, insurance, banking, and so forth.
    YA 1.388 21 The 'opposition' papers, so called, are on the same side.
    YA 1.393 17 It is a questionable compensation to the embittered feeling of a proud commoner, the reflection that a fop...is himself also an aspirant excluded with the same ruthlessness from higher circles...
    Hist 2.4 26 Every revolution was first a thought in one man's mind, and when the same thought occurs to another man, it is the key to that era.
    Hist 2.7 3 We have the same interest in condition and character.
    Hist 2.9 15 Who cares what the fact was, when we have made a constellation of it to hang in heaven an immortal sign? London and Paris and New York must go the same way.
    Hist 2.11 3 ...we aim to master intellectually the steps and reach the same height or the same degradation that our fellow, our proxy has done.
    Hist 2.13 20 Nature is a mutable cloud which is always and never the same.
    Hist 2.13 21 [Nature] casts the same thought into troops of forms...
    Hist 2.14 16 How many are the acts of one man in which we recognize the same character!
    Hist 2.14 22 We have the same national mind expressed for us again in [Greek] literature...
    Hist 2.15 18 A particular picture or copy of verses, if it do not awaken the same train of images, will yet superinduce the same sentiment as some wild mountain walk...
    Hist 2.15 19 A particular picture or copy of verses, if it do not awaken the same train of images, will yet superinduce the same sentiment as some wild mountain walk...
    Hist 2.16 6 There are men whose manners have the same essential splendor as the simple and awful sculpture on the friezes of the Parthenon and the remains of the earliest Greek art.
    Hist 2.16 10 ...there are compositions of the same strain to be found in the books of all ages.
    Hist 2.17 12 ...a profound nature awakens in us...the same power and beauty that a gallery of sculpture or of pictures addresses.
    Hist 2.26 22 The Greek had, it seems, the same fellow-beings as I.
    Hist 2.27 4 ...when a truth that fired the soul of Pindar fires mine, time is no more. When I feel that we two meet in a perception, that our two souls are tinged with the same hue...why should I measure degrees of latitude...
    Hist 2.27 12 The student interprets...the days of maritime adventure and circumnavigation by quite parallel miniature experiences of his own. To the sacred history of the world he has the same key.
    Hist 2.33 14 See in Goethe's Helena the same desire that every word should be a thing.
    Hist 2.33 25 ...although that poem [Goethe's Helena] be as vague and fantastic as a dream, yet is it much more attractive than the more regular dramatic pieces of the same author...
    SR 2.47 22 ...we are now men, and must accept in the highest mind the same transcendent destiny;...
    SR 2.49 17 Who...having observed, [can] observe again from the same unaffected, unbiased, unbribable, unaffrighted innocence,-must always be formidable.
    SR 2.58 12 A character is like an acrostic or Alexandrian stanza;-read it forward, backward, or across, it still spells the same thing.
    SR 2.62 27 ...power and estate, are a gaudier vocabulary than private John and Edward in a...common day's work; but the things of life are the same to both;...
    SR 2.63 1 ...power and estate, are a gaudier vocabulary than private John and Edward in a...common day's work; but...the sum total of both is the same.
    SR 2.64 15 ...the sense of being which in calm hours rises...in the soul, is not diverse from things...from man, but...proceeds obviously from the same source whence their life and being also proceed.
    SR 2.70 22 I see the same law working in nature for conservation and growth.
    SR 2.71 26 Why should we assume the faults of our friend...or child, because they...are said to have the same blood?
    SR 2.73 18 If you are true, but not in the same truth with me, cleave to your companions;...
    SR 2.74 5 ...all persons have their moments...when they look out into the region of absolute truth; then will they justify me and do the same thing.
    SR 2.79 24 The pupil takes the same delight in subordinating every thing to the new terminology as a girl who has just learned botany in seeing a new earth and new seasons thereby.
    SR 2.84 3 ...if you can hear what these patriarchs say, surely you can reply to them in the same pitch of voice;...
    SR 2.85 3 ...the same blow shall send the white to his grave.
    SR 2.87 13 The same particle does not rise from the valley [of the wave] to the ridge.
    Comp 2.95 19 i find a similar base tone in the popular religious works of the day and the same doctrines assumed by the literary men when occasionally they treat the related topics.
    Comp 2.97 22 A surplusage given to one part is paid out of a reduction from another part of the same creature.
    Comp 2.98 6 The same dualism underlies the nature and condition of man.
    Comp 2.98 26 There is always some levelling circumstance that puts down...the fortunate, substantially on the same ground with all others.
    Comp 2.100 23 Under all governments the influence of character remains the same...
    Comp 2.106 24 [Jove] cannot get his own thunders; Minerva keeps the key of them... A plain confession of the in-working of the All and of its moral aim. The Indian mythology ends in the same ethics;...
    Comp 2.111 21 ...all unjust accumulations of property and power, are avenged in the same manner.
    Comp 2.114 1 Labor is watched over by the same pitiless laws.
    Comp 2.118 21 The same guards which protect us from disaster, defect and enmity, defend us, if we will, from selfishness and fraud.
    Comp 2.119 3 ...it is as impossible for a man to be cheated by any one but himself, as for a thing to be and not to be at the same time.
    SL 2.135 17 The face of external nature teaches the same lesson.
    SL 2.136 7 Our Sunday-schools and churches and pauper-societies are yokes to the neck. ... There are natural ways of arriving at the same ends at which these aim, but do not arrive.
    SL 2.136 9 Why should all virtue work in one and the same way?
    SL 2.145 24 ...Napoleon sent to Vienna M. de Narbonne...saying that it was indispensable to send to the old aristocracy of Europe men of the same connection...
    SL 2.151 4 ...only that soul can be my friend which I encounter on the line of my own march, that soul [which]...native of the same celestial latitude, repeats in its own all my experience.
    SL 2.152 1 The same reality pervades all teaching.
    SL 2.152 6 There is no teaching until the pupil is brought into the same state or principle in which you are;...
    SL 2.157 7 This is that law whereby a work of art...sets us in the same state of mind wherein the artist was when he made it.
    SL 2.165 7 Bonaparte...rewarded in one and the same way the good soldier, the good astronomer, the good poet, the good player.
    Lov1 2.179 25 The same fluency may be observed in every work of the plastic arts.
    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. The same remark holds of painting.
    Lov1 2.185 8 Does that other [lover] see the same star...that now delights me?
    Lov1 2.185 9 Does that other [lover] see...the same melting cloud...that now delights me?
    Lov1 2.185 9 Does that other [lover]...read the same book...that now delights me?
    Lov1 2.185 10 Does that other [lover]...feel the same emotion, that now delights me?
    Fdsp 2.192 21 The same idea exalts conversation with [the commended stranger].
    Fdsp 2.195 7 ...the Genius of my life being thus social, the same affinity will exert its energy on whomsoever is as noble as these men and women...
    Fdsp 2.196 16 In strict science all persons underlie the same condition of an infinite remoteness.
    Fdsp 2.212 19 Late,--very late,--we perceive that...no consuetudes or habits of society would be of any avail to establish us in such relations with [the noble] as we desire,--but solely the uprise of nature in us to the same degree it is in them;...
    Prd1 2.221 11 ...I have the same title to write on prudence that I have to write on poetry or holiness.
    Hsm1 2.247 22 I do not readily remember any poem, play, sermon, novel or oration that our press vents in the last few years, which goes to the same [heroic] tune.
    Hsm1 2.254 18 The temperance of the hero proceeds from the same wish to do no dishonor to the worthiness he has.
    Hsm1 2.256 7 Socrates's condemnation of himself to be maintained in all honor in the Prytaneum, during his life, and Sir Thomas More's playfulness at the scaffold, are of the same strain.
    Hsm1 2.257 8 If we dilate in beholding...the Roman pride, it is that we are already domesticating the same sentiment.
    OS 2.269 24 Every man's words who speaks from that [inner] life must sound vain to those who do not dwell in the same thought on their own part.
    OS 2.275 23 Within the same sentiment is the germ of intellectual growth...
    OS 2.275 24 Within the same sentiment is the germ of intellectual growth, which obeys the same law.
    OS 2.278 18 We do not yet possess ourselves, and we know at the same time that we are much more.
    OS 2.278 19 I feel the same truth how often in my trivial conversation with my neighbors, that somewhat higher in each of us overlooks this by-play...
    OS 2.279 15 ...if I renounce my will and act for the soul...out of [my child' s] young eyes looks the same soul;...
    OS 2.280 7 To the bad thought which I find in [the book I read], the same soul becomes a discerning, separating sword, and lops it away.
    OS 2.282 20 The nature of these revelations is the same;...
    OS 2.285 3 By the same fire...which burns until it shall dissolve all things into the waves and surges of an ocean of light, we see and know each other...
    OS 2.288 1 The same Omniscience flows into the intellect and makes what we call genius.
    Cir 2.302 16 The Greek letters...are already passing under the same sentence and tumbling into the inevitable pit which the creation of new thought opens for all that is old.
    Cir 2.306 21 I see no reason why I should not have the same thought...to-morrow.
    Cir 2.306 21 I see no reason why I should not have...the same power of expression, to-morrow.
    Cir 2.313 5 We have the same need to command a view of the religion of the world.
    Cir 2.314 23 The same law of eternal procession ranges all that we call the virtues...
    Cir 2.316 1 ...one man's wisdom [is] another's folly; as one beholds the same objects from a higher point.
    Cir 2.317 3 The terror of reform is the discovery that we must cast away our virtues...into the same pit that has consumed our grosser vices...
    Int 2.333 12 I knew...a person...who, seeing my whim for writing, fancied that my experiences had somewhat superior; whilst I saw that his experiences were as good as mine. Give them to me and I would make the same use of them.
    Int 2.334 26 In the intellect constructive...we observe the same balance of two elements as in intellect receptive.
    Int 2.336 11 There is an inequality...between two men and between two moments of the same man, in respect to this faculty [of communication].
    Int 2.336 13 In common hours we have the same facts as in the uncommon or inspired...
    Int 2.340 13 [The intellect] must have the same wholeness which nature has.
    Int 2.343 3 ...a true and natural man contains and is the same truth which an eloquent man articulates;...
    Int 2.344 24 I were a fool not to sacrifice a thousand Aeschyluses to my intellectual integrity. Especially take the same ground in regard to abstract truth...
    Art1 2.351 15 ...the same power which sees through [the painter's] eyes is seen in that spectacle [of nature];...
    Art1 2.357 13 A gallery of sculpture teaches more austerely the same lesson [as painting].
    Art1 2.361 14 When I came at last to Rome and saw with eyes the pictures, I found that genius...was the plain you and me I...had left at home in so many conversations. I had had the same experience already in a church at Naples.
    Art1 2.363 25 Art should exhilarate...awakening in the beholder the same sense of universal relation and power which the work evinced in the artist...
    Art1 2.366 17 Art makes the same effort which a sensual prosperity makes;...
    Pt1 3.4 19 ...we are...children of the fire, made of it, and only the same divinity transmuted and at two or three removes, when we know least about it.
    Pt1 3.5 10 Nature enhances her beauty, to the eye of loving men, from their belief that the poet is beholding her shows at the same time.
    Pt1 3.34 11 The poet did not stop at the color or the form, but read their meaning; neither may he rest in this meaning, but he makes the same objects exponents of his new thought.
    Pt1 3.34 25 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.
    Pt1 3.36 10 ...the same man or society of men may wear one aspect to themselves and their companions, and a different aspect to higher intelligences.
    Pt1 3.36 24 ...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, and perchance to themselves appear upright men; and whether I appear as a man to all eyes. The Brahmins and Pythagoras propounded the same question...
    Pt1 3.37 18 We have yet had no genius in America...which...saw, in the barbarism and materialism of the times, another carnival of the same gods whose picture he so much admires in Homer;...
    Pt1 3.37 23 Banks and tariffs...rest on the same foundations of wonder as the town of Troy and the temple of Delphi, and are as swiftly passing away.
    Exp 3.47 5 I quote another man's saying; unluckily that other withdraws himself in the same way, and quotes me.
    Exp 3.51 11 Of what use to make heroic vows of amendment, if the same old law-breaker is to keep them?
    Exp 3.70 9 The ancients...exalted Chance into a divinity; but that is to stay too long at the spark, which glitters truly at one point, but the universe is warm with the latency of the same fire.
    Exp 3.75 1 I exert the same quality of power in all places.
    Exp 3.76 17 ...the chagrins which the bad heart gives off as bubbles, at once take form as...shopmen or bar-keepers in hotels, and threaten or insult whatever is threatenable and insultable in us. 'T is the same with our idolatries.
    Exp 3.77 18 There will be the same gulf between every me and thee as between the original and the picture.
    Exp 3.80 10 The partial action of each strong mind in one direction is a telescope for the objects on which it is pointed. But every other part of knowledge is to be pushed to the same extravagance, ere the soul attains her due sphericity.
    Chr1 3.91 1 Man...in these examples [of men of character] appears...to be an expression of the same laws which control the tides and the sun...
    Chr1 3.92 7 The same motive force [of character] appears in trade.
    Chr1 3.95 4 Suppose a slaver on the coast of Guinea should take on board a gang of negroes which should contain persons of the stamp of Toussaint L' Ouverture: let us fancy, under these swarthy masks he has a gang of Washingtons in chains. When they arrive at Cuba, will the relative order of the ship's company be the same?
    Chr1 3.96 21 [A healthy soul] is thus the medium of the highest influence to all who are not on the same level.
    Chr1 3.99 2 The same transport which the occurrence of the best events in the best order would occasion me, I must learn to taste purer in the perception that my position is every hour meliorated, and does already command those events I desire.
    Mrs1 3.133 1 [A man] should preserve in a new company the same attitude of mind and reality of relation which his daily associates draw him to...
    Mrs1 3.139 1 The same discrimination of fit and fair runs out, if with less rigor, into all parts of life.
    Nat2 3.181 5 Compound it how [nature] will, star, sand, fire, water, tree, man, it is still one stuff, and betrays the same properties.
    Nat2 3.181 10 [Nature] arms and equips an animal to find its place and living in the earth, and at the same time she arms and equips another animal to destroy it.
    Nat2 3.184 1 The common sense of Franklin, Dalton, Davy and Black is the same common sense which made the arrangements which now it discovers.
    Nat2 3.186 16 We are made alive and kept alive by the same arts.
    Nat2 3.186 27 All things betray the same calculated profusion.
    Nat2 3.190 11 ...bread and wine, mix and cook them how you will, leave us hungry and thirsty, after the stomach is full. It is the same with all our arts and performances.
    Nat2 3.193 6 It is the same among the men and women as among the silent trees; always a referred existence, an absence...
    Nat2 3.194 3 [Nature's] secret is untold. Many and many an Oedipus arrives; he has the whole mystery teeming in his brain. Alas! the same sorcery has spoiled his skill;...
    Pol1 3.202 7 Personal rights, universally the same, demand a government framed on the ratio of the census;...
    Pol1 3.207 4 The same necessity which secures the rights of person and property against the malignity or folly of the magistrate, determines the form and methods of governing, which are proper to each nation...
    Pol1 3.208 9 The same benign necessity and the same practical abuse appear in the parties...of opponents and defenders of the administration of the government.
    Pol1 3.209 2 A party is perpetually corrupted by personality. Whilst we absolve the association from dishonesty, we cannot extend the same charity to their leaders.
    Pol1 3.212 1 It makes no difference how many tons' weight of atmosphere presses on our heads, so long as the same pressure resists it within the lungs.
    Pol1 3.214 18 This undertaking for another is the blunder which stands in colossal ugliness in the governments of the world. It is the same thing in numbers, as in a pair, only not quite so intelligible.
    Pol1 3.219 17 [The movement toward self-government] separates the individual from all party, and unites him at the same time to the race.
    NR 3.233 17 It is a greater joy to see the author's author, than himself. A higher pleasure of the same kind I found lately at a concert, where I went to hear Handel's Messiah.
    NR 3.234 21 We obey the same intellectual integrity when we study in exceptions the law of the world.
    NR 3.236 17 You are one thing, but Nature is one thing and the other thing, in the same moment.
    NR 3.245 14 ...Things are, and are not, at the same time;...
    NR 3.247 15 ...the most sincere and revolutionary doctrine...shall in a few weeks be coldly set aside by the same speaker, as morbid;...
    NR 3.247 17 ...the most sincere and revolutionary doctrine...shall in a few weeks be coldly set aside...and the same immeasurable credulity demanded for new audacities.
    NR 3.248 3 How sincere and confidential we can be, saying all that lies in the mind, and yet go away feeling that all is yet unsaid, from the incapacity of the parties to know each other, although they use the same words!
    NER 3.254 25 ...we are very easily disposed to resist the same generosity of speech when we miss originality and truth to character in it.
    NER 3.256 3 The same disposition to scrutiny and dissent appeared in civil, festive, neighborly, and domestic society.
    NER 3.257 7 The same insatiable criticism may be traced in the efforts for the reform of Education.
    NER 3.264 10 The scheme [of the new communities] offers...to make every member rich, on the same amount of property that, in separate families, would leave every member poor.
    NER 3.268 14 A man of good sense but of little faith...said to me that he liked to have concerts, and fairs, and churches, and other public amusements go on. I am afraid the remark...comes from the same origin as the maxim of the tyrant, If you would rule the world quietly, you must keep it amused.
    NER 3.271 17 ...[every man] he puts himself on the side of his enemies, listening gladly to what they say of him, and accusing himself of the same things.
    NER 3.274 26 The same magnanimity shows itself in our social relations...
    NER 3.277 3 ...[every man at heart] wishes that the same healing should not stop in his thought...
    UGM 4.13 12 Looking where others look, and conversing with the same things, we catch the charm which lured them.
    UGM 4.13 18 Talk much with any man of vigorous mind, and we acquire very fast the habit of looking at things in the same light...
    UGM 4.31 9 Men who know the same things are not long the best company for each other.
    PPh 4.45 18 How Plato came thus to be Europe, and philosophy, and almost literature, is the problem for us to solve. This could not have happened without a...man, able to honor, at the same time, the ideal, or laws of the mind, and fate, or the order of nature.
    PPh 4.46 8 The same weakness and want, on a higher plane, occurs daily in the education of ardent young men and women.
    PPh 4.48 17 All philosophy, of East and West, has the same centripetence.
    PPh 4.50 22 The whole world is but a manifestation of Vishnu [said Krishna], who...is to be regarded by the wise as not differing from, but as the same as themselves.
    PPh 4.69 22 [Plato] has the same regard to [wisdom] as the source of excellence in works of art.
    PPh 4.69 26 When an artificer, [Plato] says, in the fabrication of any work, looks to that which always subsists according to the same; and, employing a model of this kind, expresses its idea and power in his work,--it must follow that his production should be beautiful.
    PPh 4.70 5 ...the Banquet [of Plato] is a teaching in the same spirit [of ascension]...that the love of the sexes is initial, and symbolizes at a distance the passion of the soul for that immense lake of beauty it exists to seek.
    PPh 4.70 12 In the same mind [Plato] constantly affirms that virtue cannot be taught;...
    PPh 4.72 24 [Socrates] wore no under garment; his upper garment was the same for summer and winter...
    SwM 4.118 10 Why hear I the same sense from countless differing voices...
    SwM 4.122 27 Instead of a religion which visited [Swedenborg] diplomatically three or four times...here was a teaching which accompanied him...into natural objects...and opened the future world by indicating the continuity of the same laws.
    SwM 4.128 7 Do you love me? means [to Swedenborg], Do you see the same truth?
    SwM 4.128 8 Do you love me? means [to Swedenborg], Do you see the same truth? If you do, we are happy with the same happiness...
    SwM 4.133 16 All [Swedenborg's] types mean the same few things.
    SwM 4.134 26 That Hebrew muse, which taught the lore of right and wrong to men, had the same excess of influence for [Swedenborg] it has had for the nations.
    SwM 4.137 16 Under the same theologic cramp, many of [Swedenborg's] dogmas are bound.
    SwM 4.139 5 ...we feel the more generous spirit of the Indian Vishnu,--I am the same to all mankind.
    SwM 4.141 19 [Swedenborg's] spiritual world bears the same relation to the generosities and joys of truth of which human souls have already made us cognizant, as a man's bad dreams bear to his ideal life.
    MoS 4.162 3 ...some stark and sufficient man, who is...sufficiently related to the world to do justice to Paris or London, and, at the same time, a vigorous and original thinker, whom cities can not overawe, but who uses them,--is the fit person to occupy this ground of speculation.
    MoS 4.168 13 One has the same pleasure in [Montaigne's language] that he feels in listening to the necessary speech of men about their work...
    MoS 4.169 23 [Montaigne says] Most of my actions are guided by example, not choice. In the hour of death, he gave the same weight to custom.
    ShP 4.192 4 ...as we could not hope to suppress newspapers now...neither then [in Shakespeare's time] could king, prelate, or puritan, alone or united, suppress an organ which was ballad, epic, newspaper, caucus, lecture, Punch and library, at the same time.
    ShP 4.199 25 ...what is best written or done by genius in the world...came by wide social labor, when a thousand wrought like one, sharing the same impulse.
    ShP 4.200 26 The translation of Plutarch gets its excellence by being translation on translation. There never was a time when there was none. All the truly idiomatic and national phrases are kept, and all others successively picked out and thrown away. Something like the same process had gone on, long before, with the originals of these books.
    ShP 4.209 14 Who ever read the volume of [Shakespeare's] Sonnets without finding that the poet had there revealed...the confusion of sentiments in the most susceptible, and, at the same time, the most intellectual of men?
    ShP 4.213 5 ...[Shakespeare] is strong, as nature is strong, who lifts the land into mountain slopes without effort and by the same rule as she floats a bubble in the air...
    ShP 4.218 27 ...other men...beheld the same objects [as Shakespeare]...
    NMW 4.238 15 Before he fought a battle, Bonaparte thought...a great deal about what he should do in case of a reverse of fortune. The same prudence and good sense mark all his behavior.
    NMW 4.238 24 It was a whimsical economy of the same kind which dictated [Bonaparte's] practice, when general in Italy, in regard to his burdensome correspondence.
    NMW 4.253 13 ...that is the fatal quality which we discover in our pursuit of wealth, that it...is bought by the breaking or weakening of the sentiments; and it is inevitable that we should find the same fact in the history of this champion [Napoleon]...
    NMW 4.258 16 It was...the eternal law of man and of the world which baulked and ruined [Napoleon]; and the result, in a million experiments, will be the same.
    GoW 4.265 7 Society has, at all times, the same want...
    GoW 4.269 16 There have been times when [the writer] was a sacred person... Every word was carved before his eyes into the earth and the sky; and the sun and stars were only letters of the same purport and of no more necessity.
    GoW 4.276 15 Goethe would have no word that does not cover a thing. The same measure will still serve [with the Devil]...
    GoW 4.281 19 If [the writer] can not rightly express himself to-day, the same things subsist and will open themselves to-morrow.
    GoW 4.287 3 [Goethe's] Daily and Yearly Journal...and the historical part of his Theory of Colors, have the same interest.
    ET1 5.6 8 ...[Greenough] thought art would never prosper until we left our shy jealous ways and worked in society as [the Greeks]. All his thoughts breathed the same generosity.
    ET1 5.6 17 I have a private letter from [Greenough],--later, but respecting the same period...
    ET1 5.9 4 Landor despised entomology, yet, in the same breath, said, the sublime was in a grain of dust.
    ET1 5.14 15 ...I...find it impossible to recall the largest part of [Coleridge' s] discourse, which was often like so many printed paragraphs in his book,-- perhaps the same...
    ET2 5.25 4 The occasion of my second visit to England was an invitation from some Mechanics' Institutes in Lancashire and Yorkshire, which separately are organized much in the same way as our New England Lyceums...
    ET2 5.32 27 When their privilege was disputed by the Dutch and other junior marines, on the plea that you could never anchor on the same wave... the English did not stick to claim the channel, or the bottom of all the main...
    ET3 5.36 19 ...we have the same difficulty in making a social or moral estimate of England, that the sheriff finds in drawing a jury to try some cause which has agitated the whole community...
    ET3 5.40 22 I have seen a kratometric chart designed to show that the city of Philadelphia was in the same thermic belt, and by inference in the same belt of empire, as the cities of Athens, Rome and London.
    ET3 5.40 23 I have seen a kratometric chart designed to show that the city of Philadelphia was in the same thermic belt, and by inference in the same belt of empire, as the cities of Athens, Rome and London.
    ET4 5.45 4 The British Empire is reckoned to contain (in 1848)...perhaps a fifth of the population of the globe... Perhaps forty of these millions are of British stock. Add the United States of America, which reckon (in the same year), exclusive of slaves, 20,000,000...and you have a population of English descent and language of 60,000,000...
    ET4 5.46 23 We anticipate in the doctrine of race something like that law of physiology that whatever bone, muscle, or essential organ is found in one healthy individual, the same part or organ may be found in or near the same place in its congener;...
    ET4 5.46 24 We anticipate in the doctrine of race something like that law of physiology that whatever bone, muscle, or essential organ is found in one healthy individual, the same part or organ may be found in or near the same place in its congener;...
    ET4 5.48 3 Race is a controlling influence in the Jew, who, for two millenniums...has preserved the same character and employments.
    ET4 5.53 17 In Ireland are the same climate and soil as in England, but less food...
    ET4 5.56 26 The men who have built a ship and invented the rig, cordage, sail, compass and pump;...have acquired much more than a ship. Now arm them and every shore is at their mercy. ... As soon as the shores are sufficiently peopled to make piracy a losing business, the same skill and courage are ready for the service of trade.
    ET4 5.63 18 The [English] public schools are charged with being bear-gardens of brutal strength, and are liked by the people for that cause. The fagging is a trait of the same quality.
    ET4 5.66 8 The bronze monuments of crusaders lying cross-legged in the Temple Church at London...are of the same type as the best youthful heads of men now in England;...
    ET4 5.66 9 The bronze monuments of crusaders lying cross-legged in the Temple Church at London...please by beauty of the same character...which is daily seen in the streets of London.
    ET4 5.68 21 Even for [the English] highwaymen the same virtue is claimed, and Robin Hood comes described to us as mitissimus praedonum; the gentlest thief.
    ET5 5.77 23 A man of that [English] brain thinks and acts thus; and his neighbor, being afflicted with the same kind of brain...thinks the same thing...
    ET5 5.77 24 A man of that [English] brain thinks and acts thus; and his neighbor, being afflicted with the same kind of brain...thinks the same thing...
    ET5 5.89 15 When Thor and his companions arrive at Utgard, he is told that nobody is permitted to remain here, unless he understand some art, and excel in it all other men. The same question is still put to the posterity of Thor.
    ET5 5.90 22 Private persons [in England] exhibit...the same pertinacity as the nation showed in the coalitions in which it yoked Europe against the empire of Bonaparte...
    ET5 5.91 24 In the same [English] spirit, were the excavation and research by Sir Charles Followes for the Xanthian monument...
    ET5 5.94 4 The climate and geography [of England], I said, were factitious, as if the hands of man had arranged the conditions. The same character pervades the whole kingdom.
    ET6 5.106 25 The power and possession which surround [the English] are their own creation, and they exert the same commanding industry at this moment.
    ET6 5.107 22 ...with the national tendency to sit fast in the same spot for many generations, [the Englishman's house] comes to be, in the course of time, a museum of heirlooms...
    ET6 5.110 14 Wordsworth says of the small freeholders of Westmoreland, Many of these humble sons of the hills had a consciousness that the land which they tilled had for more than five hundred years been possessed by men of the same name and blood.
    ET6 5.114 19 English stories, bon-mots and the recorded table-talk of their wits, are as good as the best of the French. In America, we...have not yet attained the same perfection...
    ET7 5.121 25 [The English] require the same adherence, thorough conviction and reality, in public men.
    ET7 5.122 11 The ruling passion of Englishmen in these days is a terror of humbug. In the same proportion they value honesty, stoutness, and adherence to your own.
    ET7 5.122 21 [The English] attack their own politicians every day, on the same grounds, as adventurers.
    ET8 5.129 7 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.
    ET9 5.146 20 The same insular limitation pinches [the Englishman's] foreign politics.
    ET9 5.150 27 The English dislike the American structure of society, whilst yet trade, mills, public education and Chartism are doing what they can to create in England the same social condition.
    ET10 5.162 13 Of course [steam] draws the [English] nobility into the competition...in the application of steam to agriculture, and sometimes into trade. But it also introduces large classes into the same competition;...
    ET10 5.167 9 The incessant repetition of the same hand-work dwarfs the man...
    ET11 5.173 13 The hopes of the commoners [in England] take the same direction with the interest of the patricians.
    ET11 5.176 6 In the same line of Warwick, the successor next but one to [Richard] Beauchamp was the stout earl of Henry VI. and Edward IV.
    ET11 5.178 26 This long descent of [English] families and this cleaving through ages to the same spot of ground, captivates the imagination.
    ET11 5.179 24 ...the English are those barbarians of Jamblichus, who... firmly continue to employ the same words, which are also dear to the gods.
    ET11 5.189 13 Against the cry of the old tenantry and the sympathetic cry of the English press, the [English nobility] have rooted out and planted anew, and now six millions of people live, and live better, on the same land that fed three millions.
    ET11 5.195 22 In the university, the [English] noblemen are exempted from the public exercises for the degree...by which they attain a degree called honorary. At the same time, the fees they have to pay for matriculation, and on all other occasions, are much higher.
    ET12 5.203 11 In the Bodleian Library, Dr. Bandinel showed me the manuscript Plato...a manuscript Virgil of the same century;...
    ET12 5.203 13 In the Bodleian Library, Dr. Bandinel showed me...the first Bible printed at Mentz...and a duplicate of the same...
    ET13 5.217 24 [The English Church] has the seal of...a ritual marked by the same secular merits, nothing cheap or purchasable.
    ET13 5.218 25 Another part of the same service [at York Minster] on this occasion was not insignificant.
    ET13 5.222 18 ...the same [English] men who have brought free trade or geology to their present standing, look grave and lofty and shut down their valve as soon as the conversation approaches the English Church.
    ET13 5.230 20 But the religion of England...is it the sects? no; they...are to the Established Church as cabs are to a coach, cheaper and more convenient, but really the same thing.
    ET14 5.233 15 When [the Englishman] is intellectual, and a poet or a philosopher, he carries the same hard truth and the same keen machinery into the mental sphere.
    ET14 5.234 7 Hudibras has the same hard mentality...
    ET14 5.241 2 Plato had signified the same sense, when he said, All the great arts require a subtle and speculative research into the law of nature...
    ET14 5.246 6 ...in Hallam, or in the firmer intellectual nerve of Mackintosh, one still finds the same type of English genius.
    ET14 5.248 19 Sir David Brewster sees the high place of Bacon, without finding Newton indebted to him, and thinks it a mistake. Bacon occupies it... as an effect of the same cause which showed itself more pronounced afterwards in Hooke, Boyle and Halley.
    ET14 5.250 26 ...a master should inspire a confidence that he will adhere to his convictions and give his present studies always the same high place.
    ET14 5.253 3 I fear the same fault [lack of inspiration] lies in [English] science...
    ET14 5.257 22 ...he who aspires to be the English poet must be as large as London, not in the same kind as London, but in his own kind.
    ET15 5.271 7 Punch is equally an expression of English good sense, as the London Times. It is the comic version of the same sense.
    ET16 5.275 25 I told Carlyle that...I like the [English] people;...but meantime, I surely know that as soon as I return to Massachusetts I shall lapse at once into the feeling...that no skill or activity can long compete with the prodigious natural advantages of that country, in the hands of the same race;...
    ET16 5.277 12 It was pleasant to see that...[Stonehenge]--two upright stones and a lintel laid across...were like what is most permanent on the face of the planet: these, and the barrows,--mere mounds...like the same mound on the plain of Troy...
    ET16 5.281 6 ...at the summer solstice, the sun rises exactly over the top of that [astronomical] stone [at Stonehenge], at the Druidical temple at Abury, there is also an astronomical stone, in the same relative position.
    ET16 5.289 12 Just before entering Winchester we stopped at the Church of Saint Cross, and...we demanded a piece of bread and a draught of beer, which the founder, Henry de Blois, in 1136, commanded should be given to every one who should ask it at the gate. We had both, from the old couple who take care of the church. Some twenty people every day, they said, make the same demand.
    ET19 5.310 26 I am...here...to speak...of that which is good in holidays and working-days, the same in one century and in another century.
    F 6.1 14 ...the foresight that awaits/ Is the same Genius that creates./
    F 6.3 7 ...the subject [the Spirit of the Times] had the same prominence in some remarkable pamphlets and journals issued in London in the same season.
    F 6.3 9 ...the subject [the Spirit of the Times] had the same prominence in some remarkable pamphlets and journals issued in London in the same season.
    F 6.4 14 By the same obedience to other thoughts we learn [their power]...
    F 6.4 26 ...by firmly stating all that is agreeable to experience on one [topic], and doing the same justice to the opposing facts in the others, the true limitations will appear.
    F 6.5 21 Our Calvinists in the last generation had something of the same dignity.
    F 6.6 10 The Greek Tragedy expressed the same sense [of Fate].
    F 6.18 10 No one can read the history of astronomy without perceiving that Copernicus, Newton...are not...a new kind of men, but that Thales... Oenipodes...each had the same tense geometrical brain...
    F 6.18 11 No one can read the history of astronomy without perceiving that Copernicus, Newton...are not...a new kind of men, but that Thales... Oenipodes...each had the same tense geometrical brain, apt for the same vigorous computation...
    F 6.25 4 A tube made of a film of glass can resist the shock of the ocean if filled with the same water.
    F 6.31 22 The friendly power works on the same rules in the next farm and the next planet.
    F 6.37 24 [Man's] food is cooked when he arrives;...his companions arrived at the same hour...
    F 6.39 24 The same fitness must be presumed between a man and the time and event, as between the sexes...
    F 6.41 4 Thus events grow on the same stem with persons;...
    F 6.49 10 ...in geology, vast time but the same laws as to-day.
    F 6.49 15 Why should we fear to be crushed by savage elements, we who are made up of the same elements?
    Pow 6.56 14 One man is made of the same stuff of which events are made;...
    Pow 6.56 20 ...everywhere men are led in the same manners.
    Pow 6.62 7 The same energy in the Greek Demos drew the remark that the evils of popular government appear greater than they are;...
    Pow 6.63 20 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 6.64 3 ...all kinds of power usually emerge at the same time;...
    Pow 6.64 6 The same elements are always present...
    Pow 6.69 20 The excess of virility has the same importance in general history as in private and industrial life.
    Pow 6.77 14 ...in human action, against the spasm of energy we offset the continuity of drill. We spread the same amount of force over much time, instead of condensing it into a moment.
    Pow 6.77 16 'T is the same ounce of gold here in a ball, and there in a leaf.
    Pow 6.78 10 The way to learn German is to read the same dozen pages over and over a hundred times...
    Pow 6.78 17 The rule for hospitality and Irish 'help' is to have the same dinner every day throughout the year.
    Pow 6.78 25 A humorous friend of mine thinks that the reason why Nature... gets up such inconceivably fine sunsets, is that she has learned how, at last, by dint of doing the same thing so very often.
    Wth 6.87 12 When the farmer's peaches are taken from under the tree and carried into town, they have a new look and a hundredfold value over the fruit which grew on the same bough and lies fulsomely on the ground.
    Wth 6.89 10 The same correspondence that is between thirst in the stomach and water in the spring, exists between the whole of man and the whole of nature.
    Wth 6.94 17 ...the supply in nature of railroad-presidents...fire-annihilators, etc., is limited by the same law which keeps the proportion in the supply of carbon, of alum, and of hydrogen.
    Wth 6.95 17 The Persians say, 'T is the same to him who wears a shoe, as if the whole earth were covered with leather.
    Wth 6.104 2 If you take out of State Street the ten honestest merchants and put in ten roguish persons controlling the same amount of capital, the rates of insurance will indicate it;...
    Wth 6.104 19 ...if you should take out of the powerful class engaged in trade a hundred good men and put in a hundred bad, or, what is just the same thing, introduce a demoralizing institution, would not the dollar... presently find it out?
    Wth 6.108 4 You dismiss your laborer, saying, Patrick, I shall send for you as soon as I cannot do without you. Patrick goes off contented, for he knows that...however unwilling you may be, the canteloupes, crook-necks and cucumbers will send for him. Who but must wish that all labor and value should stand on the same simple and surly market?
    Wth 6.110 16 [Immigrants] go into the poor-rates, and though we refuse wages, we must now pay the same amount in the form of taxes.
    Wth 6.117 23 I remember in Warwickshire to have been shown a fair manor, still in the same name as in Shakspeare's time.
    Wth 6.124 6 Another point of economy is to look for seed of the same kind as you sow...
    Wth 6.126 8 Will [the man] spend his income, or will he invest? His body and every organ is under the same law.
    Ctr 6.139 15 A boy, says Plato, is the most vicious of all wild beasts; and in the same spirit the old English poet Gascoigne says, A boy is better unborn than untaught.
    Ctr 6.141 5 Our arts and tools give to him who can handle them much the same advantage over the novice as if you extended his life...
    Ctr 6.143 5 [The boy] learns chess, whist, dancing and theatricals. The father observes that another boy has learned algebra and geometry in the same time.
    Ctr 6.145 25 The stuff of all countries is just the same.
    Ctr 6.154 20 All is made at last of the same chemical atoms.
    Bhr 6.173 26 ...in the same country [on the banks of the Mississippi], in the pews of the churches little placards plead with the worshipper against the fury of expectoration.
    Bhr 6.174 21 If you look at the pictures of patricians and of peasants of different periods and countries, you will see how well they match the same classes in our towns.
    Wsp 6.203 8 Men as naturally make a state, or a church, as caterpillars a web. If they were more refined...it would be nervous, like that of the Shakers, who...it is said are affected in the same way and the same time, to work and to play;...
    Wsp 6.203 11 ...as [the Shakers] go with perfect sympathy to their tasks in the field or shop, so are they inclined for a ride or a journey at the same instant...
    Wsp 6.207 2 The religion of the early English poets is anomalous, so devout and so blasphemous, in the same breath.
    Wsp 6.211 15 ...if an adventurer...procure himself to be elected to a post of trust...by the same arts as we detest in the house-thief,--the same gentlemen who agree to discountenance the private rogue will be forward to show civilities and marks of respect to the public one;...
    Wsp 6.211 16 ...if an adventurer...procure himself to be elected to a post of trust...by the same arts as we detest in the house-thief,--the same gentlemen who agree to discountenance the private rogue will be forward to show civilities and marks of respect to the public one;...
    Wsp 6.212 7 Even well-disposed, good sort of people are touched with the same infidelity...
    Wsp 6.212 26 ...the moral sense reappears to-day with the same morning newness that has been from of old the fountain of beauty and strength.
    Wsp 6.214 16 I have seen, said a traveller who had known the extremes of society, I have seen human nature in all its forms; it is everywhere the same...
    Wsp 6.219 25 Those [natural] laws...push the same geometry and chemistry up into the invisible plane of social and rational life...
    Wsp 6.230 20 Why should I give up my thought, because I cannot answer an objection to it? Consider only whether it remains in my life the same it was.
    Wsp 6.236 6 If [the thought] can spare me [said Benedict], I am sure I can spare it. It shall be the same with my friends.
    Wsp 6.236 17 [Benedict] had the whim not to make an apology to the same individual whom he had wronged.
    Wsp 6.240 17 Man is made of the same atoms as the world is...
    Wsp 6.240 18 Man is made of the same atoms as the world is, he shares the same impressions, predispositions and destiny.
    CbW 6.245 15 The physician prescribes hesitatingly out of his few resources the same tonic or sedative to this new and peculiar constitution which he has applied with various success to a hundred men before.
    CbW 6.250 9 Suppose the three hundred heroes at Thermopylae had paired off with three hundred Persians; would it have been all the same to Greece, and to history?
    CbW 6.252 11 We have as good right, and the same sort of right to be here, as Cape Cod or Sandy Hook have to be there.
    CbW 6.263 20 In dealing with the drunken, we do not affect to be drunk. We must treat the sick with the same firmness...
    CbW 6.264 26 You may rub the same chip of pine to the point of kindling a hundred times;...
    CbW 6.267 22 ...'t is strange how tenaciously we cling to that bell-astronomy of a protecting domestic horizon. I find the same illusion in the search after happiness which I observe every summer recommenced in this neighborhood...
    CbW 6.276 20 ...whatever art you select...all are attainable...on the same terms of selecting that for which you are apt;...
    CbW 6.277 2 Wherever there is failure, there is...some step omitted, which nature never pardons. The happy conditions of life may be had on the same terms.
    Bty 6.287 20 [The ancients] thought the same genius, at the death of its ward, entered a new-born child...
    Bty 6.287 23 The ancients believed that a genius or demon took possession at birth of each mortal, to guide him;... ... We recognize obscurely the same fact...
    Bty 6.290 8 'T is a law of botany that in plants the same virtues follow the same forms.
    Bty 6.290 9 'T is a law of botany that in plants the same virtues follow the same forms.
    Bty 6.293 2 The new mode is always only a step onward in the same direction as the last mode...
    Bty 6.293 17 I need not say how wide the same law [of gradation] ranges...
    Bty 6.294 7 One more text from the mythologists is to the same purpose...
    Bty 6.303 11 ...the imagination and senses cannot be gratified at the same time.
    Ill 6.310 2 The mysteries and scenery of the [Mammoth] cave had the same dignity that belongs to all natural objects...
    Ill 6.311 14 The same interference from our organization creates the most of our pleasure and pain.
    Ill 6.323 27 ...we transcend the circumstance continually and taste the real quality of existence; as in our employments, which only differ in the manifestations but express the same laws;...
    Ill 6.324 26 In a crowded life of many parts and performers...the same elements offer the same choices to each new comer...
    Ill 6.324 27 In a crowded life of many parts and performers...the same elements offer the same choices to each new comer...
    SS 7.14 5 Society we must have; but let it be society, and not exchanging news or eating from the same dish.
    Elo1 7.64 12 Socrates says: If any one wishes to converse with the meanest of the Lacedaemonians...when a proper opportunity offers, this same person, like a skilful jaculator, will hurl a sentence worthy of attention...
    Elo1 7.67 9 ...all these several audiences...which successively appear to greet the variety of style and topic [of the orator], are really composed out of the same persons;...
    Elo1 7.67 10 ...all these several audiences...which successively appear to greet the variety of style and topic [of the orator], are really composed out of the same persons; nay, sometimes the same individual will take active part in them all, in turn.
    Elo1 7.71 13 Homer specially delighted in drawing the same figure [of the orator].
    Elo1 7.74 18 There is a petty lawyer's fluency, which is sufficiently impressive...though it be...nothing more than a facility of expressing with accuracy and speed what everybody thinks and says more slowly; without new information, or precision of thought, but the same thing...
    Elo1 7.75 5 These accomplishments [of eloquence] are of the same kind, and only a degree higher than the coaxing of the auctioneer...
    Elo1 7.80 17 To talk of an overpowering mind rouses the same jealousy and defiance which one may observe round a table where anybody is recounting the marvellous anecdotes of mesmerism.
    Elo1 7.81 9 ...what if one should come of the same turn of mind as [a man' s] own...
    Elo1 7.88 9 The statement of the fact...sinks before the statement of the law, which...is a rarest gift, being in all great masters one and the same thing...
    Elo1 7.88 13 Lord Mansfield's merit is the merit of common sense. It is the same quality we admire in Aristotle...
    Elo1 7.89 10 A crowd of men go up to Faneuil Hall; they are all pretty well acquainted with the object of the meeting; they have all read the facts in the same newspapers.
    Elo1 7.94 22 If you would correct my false view of facts,--hold up to me the same facts in the true order of thought...
    Elo1 7.97 21 ...[the eloquent man] is to convert [the people] into fiery apostles and publishers of the same wisdom.
    DL 7.110 18 Another man is...a builder of ships...and could achieve nothing if he should dissipate himself on books or on horses. Another is a farmer...another is a chemist, and the same rule holds for all.
    DL 7.115 20 You are to bring with you that spirit which is understanding, health and self-help. To offer [man] money in lieu of these is to do him the same wrong as when the bridegroom offers his betrothed virgin a sum of money to release him from his engagements.
    DL 7.122 23 I honor that man whose ambition it is...to administer the offices...of husband, father and friend. But it requires as much breadth of power for this as for those other functions...and the reason for the failure is the same.
    DL 7.124 21 I have seen finely endowed men at college festivals... returning, as it seemed, the same boys who went away.
    DL 7.124 22 I have seen finely endowed men at college festivals... returning, as it seemed, the same boys who went away. The same jokes pleased, the same straws tickled;...
    DL 7.125 1 We...are still villagers, who think that every thing in their petty town is a little superior to the same thing anywhere else.
    DL 7.127 23 Whilst thus Nature and the hints we draw from man suggest... a household equal to the beauty and grandeur of this world, especially we learn the same lesson from those best relations to individual men which the heart is always prompting us to form.
    Farm 7.139 22 In the town where I live, farms remain in the same families for seven and eight generations;...
    Farm 7.143 27 No particle of oxygen can rust or wear, but has the same energy as on the first morning.
    Farm 7.153 2 The great elements with which [the farmer] deals cannot leave him...unconscious of his ministry; but their influence somewhat resembles that which the same Nature has on the child,--of subduing and silencing him.
    WD 7.161 12 There does not seem any limit to these new informations of the same Spirit that made the elements at first...
    WD 7.167 27 A farmer said he should like to have all the land that joined his own. Bonaparte, who had the same appetite, endeavored to make the Mediterranean a French lake.
    WD 7.171 23 ...could a power open our eyes to behold millions of spiritual creatures walk the earth,--I believe I should find that mid-plain on which they moved floored beneath and arched above with the same web of blue depth which weaves itself over me now...
    WD 7.173 12 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 7.174 14 An everlasting Now reigns in Nature, which hangs the same roses on our bushes which charmed the Roman and the Chaldaean in their hanging-gardens.
    WD 7.176 18 We owe to genius always the same debt, of lifting the curtain from the common...
    WD 7.181 17 The days at Belleisle were all different, and only joined by a perfect love of the same object.
    WD 7.182 25 ...those only write or speak best who do not too much respect the writing or the speaking. The same rule holds in science.
    WD 7.183 7 ...[Newton] used the same wit to weigh the moon that he used to buckle his shoes;...
    Boks 7.189 11 In Plato's Gorgias, Socrates says: The shipmaster walks in a modest garb near the sea, after bringing his passengers from Aegina or from Pontus;...certainly knowing that his passengers are the same and in no respect better than when he took them on board.
    Boks 7.195 4 [Nature] does the same thing by books as by her gases and plants.
    Boks 7.208 1 ...[Jonson] has really illustrated the England of his time, if not to the same extent yet much in the same way, as Walter Scott has celebrated the persons and places of Scotland.
    Boks 7.212 15 Men are ever lapsing into a beggarly habit, wherein everything that is not ciphering, that is, which does not serve the tyrannical animal, is hustled out of sight. Our orators and writers are of the same poverty...
    Clbs 7.227 13 The clergyman walks from house to house all day all the year to give people the comfort of good talk. The physician helps them mainly in the same way...
    Clbs 7.238 12 The startled giant [Wafthrudnir] replies...with Odin contended I in wise words. Thou must ever the wisest be. And still the gods and giants are so known, and still they play the same game in all the million mansions of heaven and of earth;...
    Clbs 7.238 19 The same thing took place when Leibnitz came to visit Newton; when Schiller came to Goethe;...
    Clbs 7.243 6 It was the Marchioness of Rambouillet who first got the horses out of and the scholars into the palaces, having constructed her hotel...with superb suites of drawing-rooms on the same floor...
    Clbs 7.247 24 ...it was explained to me, in a Southern city, that it was impossible to set any public charity on foot unless through a tavern dinner. I do not think our metropolitan charities would plead the same necessity;...
    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.
    Cour 7.269 6 The judge...squarely accosts the question, and by not being afraid of it...he sees presently that common arithmetic and common methods apply to this affair. Perseverance...ranges it on the same ground as other business.
    Cour 7.269 10 Morphy played a daring game in chess: the daring was only an illusion of the spectator, for the player sees his move to be well fortified and safe. You may see the same dealing in criticism;...
    Cour 7.269 18 In all applications [courage] is the same power...
    Cour 7.272 26 The statue, the architecture, were the later and inferior creation of the same [Greek] genius.
    Suc 7.305 22 An Englishman of marked character and talent, who had brought with him hither one or two friends and a library of mystics, assured me that nobody and nothing of possible interest was left in England,--he had brought all that was alive away. I was forced to reply: No, next door to you probably, on the other side of the partition in the same house, was a greater man than any you had seen.
    Suc 7.311 21 ...[the inner life]...is just the same now in maturity and hereafter in age, [as] it was in youth.
    OA 7.333 14 ...[John Adams]...remarked that all the Presidents were of the same age...
    OA 7.334 19 We asked if at Whitefield's return the same popularity continued.--Not the same fury, [John Adams] said...
    OA 7.334 20 We asked if at Whitefield's return the same popularity continued.--Not the same fury, [John Adams] said, not the same wild enthusiasm as before...
    PI 8.5 12 I believe this conviction makes the charm of chemistry,--that we have the same avoirdupois matter in an alembic, without a vestige of the old form;...
    PI 8.8 11 In botany we have...the poetic perception of metamorphosis,--that the same vegetable point or eye which is the unit of the plant can be transformed at pleasure into every part...
    PI 8.13 20 ...if the elm-tree thinks the same thing, if running water, if burning coal...say what I say, it must be true.
    PI 8.18 4 ...a painter, a sculptor, a musician, can in their several ways express the same sentiment of anger, or love, or religion.
    PI 8.20 2 Bacon expressed the same sense in his definition, Poetry accommodates the shows of things to the desires of the mind;...
    PI 8.24 21 ...the beholding and co-energizing mind sees the same refining and ascent to the third, the seventh or the tenth power of the daily accidents which the senses report...
    PI 8.25 1 This metonymy, or seeing the same sense in things so diverse, gives a pure pleasure.
    PI 8.34 21 'T is easy to repaint the mythology...of...the martyrdoms of mediaeval Europe; but to point out where the same creative force is now working in our own houses and public assemblies;...requires a subtile and commanding thought.
    PI 8.39 7 [The poet's] inspiration is power to carry out and complete the metamorphosis, which, in the imperfect kinds arrested for ages, in the perfecter proceeds rapidly in the same individual.
    PI 8.39 19 Is the solar system good art and architecture? the same wise achievement is in the human brain also...
    PI 8.43 2 None any work can frame,/ Unless himself become the same./
    PI 8.43 5 All the parts and forms of Nature are the expression or production of divine faculties, and the same are in us.
    PI 8.47 25 ...all of them shall wax old like a garment; as a vesture shalt thou change them, and they shall be changed: but thou art the same, and thy years shall have no end.
    PI 8.50 6 Now try Spenser, Marlowe, Chapman, and see...how rich and lavish their profusion. In their rhythm is...a vortex, or musical tornado, which, falling on words and the experience of a learned mind, whirls these materials into the same grand order as planets and moons obey...
    PI 8.50 19 ...every good reader will easily recall expressions or passages in works of pure science which have given him the same pleasure which he seeks in professed poets.
    PI 8.58 14 ...[The wind] is always of the same age with the ages of ages,/ And of equal breadth with the surface of the earth./
    PI 8.71 1 The poet is rare because he must be exquisitely vital and sympathetic, and, at the same time, immovably centred.
    SA 8.81 9 Though the person so clothed [in manners]...lodge in the same chamber, eat at the same table, he is yet a thousand miles off...
    SA 8.83 21 There is the same difference between heavy and genial manners as between the perceptions of octogenarians and those of young girls who see everything in the twinkling of an eye.
    SA 8.90 8 The life of these persons was conducted in the same calm and affirmative manner as their discourse.
    SA 8.106 18 Temperance, courage, love, are made up of the same jewels.
    SA 8.107 5 Any other affection between men than this geometric one of relation to the same thing, is a mere mush of materialism.
    Elo2 8.113 23 [Man] finds himself perhaps in the Senate, when the forest has cast out some wild, black-browed bantling to show the same energy in the crowd of officials which he had learned in driving cattle to the hills...
    Res 8.149 2 [The good aunt] relies on the same principle that makes the strength of Newton,--alternation of employment.
    Comc 8.157 21 The essence...of all comedy, seems to be...a non-performance of what is pretended to be performed, at the same time that one is giving loud pledges of performance.
    Comc 8.158 13 ...if there be phenomena in botany which we call abortions, the abortion...assumes to the intellect the like completeness with the further function to which in different circumstances it had attained. The same rule holds true of the animals.
    Comc 8.161 12 Prince Hal stands by, as the acute understanding, who sees the Right, and sympathizes with it, and in the heyday of youth feels also the full attractions of pleasure, and is thus eminently qualified to enjoy the joke. At the same time he is to that degree under the Reason that it does not amuse him as much as it amuses another spectator.
    Comc 8.163 23 ...it is the top of wisdom to philosophize yet not appear to do it, and in mirth to do the same with those that are serious and seem in earnest;...
    Comc 8.168 13 The pedantry of literature belongs to the same category [as that of religion and science].
    Comc 8.168 21 The same falsehood...points the perpetual satire against poverty...
    Comc 8.168 21 ...the same confusion of the sympathies because a pretension is not made good, points the perpetual satire against poverty...
    Comc 8.170 5 The same astonishment of the intellect at the disappearance of the man out of Nature...is the secret of all the fun that circulates concerning eminent fops and fashionists...
    Comc 8.172 2 The Persians have a pleasant story of Tamerlane which relates to the same particulars [of the comedy of personal appearance]...
    Comc 8.173 4 Politics also furnish the same mark for satire.
    Comc 8.174 4 The same scourge whips the joker and the enjoyer of the joke.
    QO 8.177 7 If we go into a library or newsroom, we see the same function [of suction] of a higher plane...
    QO 8.181 27 ...what we daily observe in regard to the bon-mots that circulate in society,-that every talker helps a story in repeating it, until, at last, from the slenderest filament of fact a good fable is constructed,-the same growth befalls mythology...
    QO 8.184 6 When [the Earl of Strafford] met with a well-penned oration or tract upon any subject, he framed a speech upon the same argument...
    QO 8.186 10 The fine verse in the old Scotch ballad of The Drowned Lovers...is a translation of Martial's epigram on Hero and Leander, where the prayer of Leander is the same...
    QO 8.203 22 ...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. For the same reason we dislike that the poet should choose an antique or far-fetched subject for his muse...
    PC 8.213 23 ...each European nation...had its romantic era, and the productions of that era in each rose to about the same height.
    PC 8.224 11 ...the mass is like the atom,-the same chemistry, gravity and conditions.
    PC 8.226 22 ...the tongue is always learning to say what the ear has taught it, and the hand obeys the same lesson.
    PC 8.226 25 There is anything but humiliation in the homage men pay to a great man; it is sympathy, love of the same things...
    PC 8.228 1 If [men in Kansas and California] are made as [the wise man] is, if they...eat of the same wheat...he knows that their joy or resentment rises to the same point as his own.
    PC 8.228 3 If [men in Kansas and California] are made as [the wise man] is...he knows that their joy or resentment rises to the same point as his own.
    PC 8.229 25 The same law holds for the intellect as for the will.
    PPo 8.239 20 When the bard improvised an amatory ditty, the young [Bedouin] chief's excitement was almost beyond control. The other Bedouins were scarcely less moved by these rude measures, which have the same kind of effect on the wild tribes of the Persian mountains.
    PPo 8.241 7 ...the east wind, at [Solomon's] command, took up the carpet and transported with all that were upon it, whither he pleased,-the army of birds at the same time flying overhead and forming a canopy to shade them from the sun.
    PPo 8.242 8 Firdusi...has written in the Shah Nameh the annals...of Kai Kaus, in whose palace...gold and silver and precious stones were used so lavishly that in the brilliancy produced by their combined effect, night and day appeared the same;...
    PPo 8.259 11 The same confusion of high and low...is habitual to [Hafiz].
    Insp 8.275 15 The legends of Arabia, Persia and India are of the same complexion as the Christian.
    Insp 8.275 20 ...ecstasy will be found...only an example on a higher plane of the same gentle gravitation by which stones fall and rivers run.
    Insp 8.276 21 We are waiting until some tyrannous idea emerging out of heaven shall seize and bereave us of this liberty with which we are falling abroad. Well, we have the same hint or suggestion, day by day.
    Insp 8.284 4 To-morrow to [Mirabeau] was not the same impostor as to most others.
    Grts 8.305 15 ...the sun and the planets are made in part or in whole of the same elements as the earth is.
    Grts 8.310 25 ...if you are a scholar, be that. The same laws hold for you as for the laborer.
    Grts 8.318 9 ...degrees of intellect interest only classes of men who pursue the same studies...
    Imtl 8.323 17 Whilst [the sparrow] stays in our mansion, it feels not the winter storm; but when this short moment of happiness has been enjoyed, it is forced again into the same dreary tempest from which it had escaped...
    Imtl 8.326 2 In the same spirit the modern Greeks, in their songs, ask that they may be buried where the sun can see them...
    Imtl 8.329 27 A friend of Michel Angelo saying to him that his constant labor for art must make him think of death with regret,-By no means, he said; for if life be a pleasure, yet since death also is sent by the hand of the same Master, neither should that displease us.
    Imtl 8.330 4 Plutarch, in Greece, has a deep faith that the doctrine of the Divine Providence and that of the immortality of the soul rest on one and the same basis.
    Imtl 8.343 16 [The moral sentiment] risks or ruins property, health, life itself, without hesitation, for its thought, and all men justify the man by their praise for this act. And Mahomet in the same mind declared, Not dead, but living, ye are to account all those who are slain in the way of God.
    Imtl 8.347 21 ...when we are living in the sentiments we ask no questions about time. The spiritual world takes place;-that which is always the same.
    Imtl 8.349 9 The human mind takes no account of geography, language or legends, but in all utters the same instinct.
    Dem1 10.5 18 In our dreams the same scenes and fancies are many times associated...
    Dem1 10.6 4 This feature of dreams deserves the more attention from its singular resemblance to that obscure yet startling experience which almost every person confesses in daylight, that particular passages of conversation and action have occurred to him in the same order before...
    Dem1 10.6 13 In a dream we have...the same torpidity of the highest power, the same unsurprised assent to the monstrous as these metamorphosed men [animals] exhibit.
    Dem1 10.7 10 ...in varieties of our own species where organization seems to predominate over the genius of man...we are sometimes pained by the same feeling [of the similarity between man and animal];...
    Dem1 10.9 8 We learn [from dreams] that actions whose turpitude is very differently reputed proceed from one and the same affection.
    Dem1 10.9 16 ...[dreams] have a substantial truth. The same remark may be extended to the omens and coincidences which may have astonished us.
    Dem1 10.10 3 It is no wonder that particular dreams and presentiments should fall out and be prophetic. The fallacy consists in selecting a few insignificant hints, when all are inspired with the same sense.
    Dem1 10.11 3 Belzoni describes the three marks which led him to dig for a door to the pyramid of Ghizeh. What thousands had beheld the same spot for so many ages, and seen no three marks.
    Dem1 10.14 13 Let me add one more example of the same good sense...
    Dem1 10.20 12 The Ego partial makes the dream; the Ego total the interpretation. Life is also a dream on the same terms.
    Aris 10.36 13 Every mark and scutcheon of [Nature's] indicates constitutional qualities. In science, in trade...it is the same thing.
    Aris 10.38 6 How sturdy seem to us in the history, those...Burgundies and Guesclins of the old warlike ages! We can hardly believe...that an ague or fever...ended them. We give soldiers the same advantage to-day.
    Aris 10.51 13 We do not expect [public representatives] to be saints, and it is very pleasing to see the instinct of mankind on this matter,-how much they will forgive to such as pay substantial service and work energetically after their kind; but they do not extend the same indulgence to those who claim and enjoy the same prerogative but render no returns.
    Aris 10.51 14 We do not expect [public representatives] to be saints, and it is very pleasing to see the instinct of mankind on this matter,-how much they will forgive to such as pay substantial service and work energetically after their kind; but they do not extend the same indulgence to those who claim and enjoy the same prerogative but render no returns.
    Aris 10.54 3 ...I have seen a man of teeming brain come among these men [in a village]...and drawing all these men round him...interested the whole village...in his facts;...the coldest had found themselves drawn to their neighbors by interest in the same things.
    PerF 10.71 4 The coal on your grate gives out in decomposing to-day exactly the same amount of light and heat which was taken from the sunshine in its formation in the leaves and boughs of the antediluvian tree.
    PerF 10.72 27 What I have said of the inexorable persistance of every elemental force to remain itself...the same rule applies again strictly to this force of intellect;...
    PerF 10.82 2 ...when the soldier comes home from the fight, he fills all eyes. But the soldier has the same admiration of the great parliamentary debater.
    PerF 10.82 15 The story of Orpheus, of Arion, of the Arabian minstrel, are not fables, but experiments on the same iron at white heat.
    PerF 10.84 24 [Men]...would like to have Aladdin's lamp to compel darkness, and iron-bound doors, and hostile armies, and lions and serpents to serve them like footmen. And they wish the same service from the spiritual faculties.
    PerF 10.86 4 That band which ties [cosmical laws] together...is universal good, saturating all with one being and aim, so that each...is only the same spirit applied to new departments.
    Chr2 10.100 1 Some men's words I remember so well that I must often use them to express my thought. Yes, because I perceive that we have heard the same truth...
    Chr2 10.106 9 Our ancestors spoke continually of angels and archangels with the same good faith as they would have spoken of their own parents or their late minister.
    Chr2 10.106 24 Calvinism was one and the same thing in Geneva, in Scotland, in Old and New England.
    Chr2 10.108 24 ...the stern determination...to be chaste and humble, was substantially the same, whether under a self-respect, or under a vow made on the knees at the shrine of Madonna.
    Chr2 10.114 12 Men will learn to put back the emphasis peremptorily on pure morals, always the same...
    Chr2 10.116 24 ...a few clergymen, with a more theological cast of mind, retain the traditions, but they carry them quietly. In general discourse, they are never obtruded. If the clergyman should travel...he might leave them locked up in the same closet with his occasional sermons...
    Edc1 10.126 10 ...when one and the same man passes out of the torpid into the perceiving state...all limits disappear.
    Edc1 10.136 6 Let us apply to this subject [education] the light of the same torch by which we have looked at all the phenomena of the time; the infinitude, namely, of every man.
    Edc1 10.138 15 I like...boys, who have the same liberal ticket of admission to all shops...as flies have;...
    Edc1 10.143 9 Let [the youth]...read Tom Brown at Oxford,-better yet, read Hodson's Life-Hodson who took prisoner the king of Delhi. They teach the same truth...
    Edc1 10.147 6 Teach [a boy] the difference between the similar and the same.
    Edc1 10.156 7 Can you not keep for [the child's] mind and ways, for his secret, the same curiosity you give to the squirrel, snake, rabbit...
    Supl 10.168 20 [The old head thinks] I will be as moderate as the fact, and will use the same expression, without color, which I received;...
    Supl 10.177 12 The costume [of the East], the articles in which wealth is displayed, are in the same extremes.
    SovE 10.183 3 Since the discovery of Oersted that galvanism and electricity and magnetism are only forms of one and the same force...we have continually suggested to us a larger generalization...
    SovE 10.183 8 ...each of the great departments of Nature...exhibits the same laws on a different plane;...
    SovE 10.183 16 That convertibility we so admire in plants and animal structures, whereby the repairs and ulterior uses are subserved, when one part is wounded or deficient, by another; this self-help and self-creation proceed from the same original power which works remotely in grandest and meanest structures by the same design...
    SovE 10.183 18 That convertibility we so admire in plants and animal structures, whereby the repairs and ulterior uses are subserved, when one part is wounded or deficient, by another; this self-help and self-creation proceed from the same original power which works remotely in grandest and meanest structures by the same design...
    SovE 10.184 10 ...all the animals show the same good sense in their humble walk that the man who is their enemy or friend does;...
    SovE 10.187 22 In the court of law the judge sits over the culprit, but in the court of life in the same hour the judge also stands as culprit before a true tribunal.
    SovE 10.188 3 It is the same fact existing as sentiment and as will in the mind, which works in Nature as irresistible law...
    Prch 10.221 4 ...this examination [of religion] resulting in the constant detection of errors, the flattered understanding assumes to judge all things, and to anticipate the same victories.
    Prch 10.227 16 Be not betrayed into undervaluing the churches which annoy you by their bigoted claims. They too were real churches. They answered to their times the same need as your rejection of them does to ours.
    Prch 10.228 27 What sort of respect can these preachers or newspapers inspire by their weekly praises of texts and saints, when we know that they would say just the same things if Beelzebub had written the chapter, provided it stood where it does in the public opinion?
    Prch 10.230 6 The man of practice or worldly force requires of the preacher a talent, a force...the same as his own, but wholly applied to the priest's things.
    Prch 10.231 24 At the same time it is impossible to pay no regard to the day's events...
    Prch 10.235 5 Great sweetness of temper neutralizes such vast amounts of acid! As for position, the position is always the same...
    Schr 10.275 20 Nature could not leave herself without a seer and expounder. But he could not see or teach without organs. The same necessity then that would create him reappears in his splendid gifts.
    Schr 10.283 14 [Whosoever looks with heed into his thoughts] will find there is somebody within him that knows more than he does...makes no progress, but was wise in youth as in age. More or less clouded it yet resides the same in all...
    Schr 10.286 18 [The scholar] is to eat insult, drink insult, be clothed and shod in insult until he has learned that this bitter bread and shameful dress... is of the same chemistry as praise and fat living;...
    Schr 10.289 8 ...if I could prevail to communicate the incommunicable mysteries, you [scholars] should see...that ever as you ascend your proper and native path, you receive the keys of Nature and history, and rise on the same stairs to science and to joy.
    Plu 10.297 1 M. Leveque has given an exposition of [Plutarch's] moral philosophy...in the Revue des Deux Mondes; and M. C. Martha, chapters on the genius of Marcus Aurelius, of Persius and Lucretius, in the same journal;...
    Plu 10.304 25 ...asking Epaminondas about the manner of Lysis's burial, I found that Lysis had taught him as far as the incommunicable mysteries of our sect, and that the same Daemon that waited on Lysis, presided over him...
    Plu 10.312 24 Plutarch...thought it the top of wisdom...to reach in mirth the same ends which the most serious are proposing.
    Plu 10.313 17 [Plutarch] reminds his friends that the Delphic oracles have given several answers the same in substance as that formerly given to Corax the Naxian: It sounds profane impiety/ To teach that human souls e'er die./
    Plu 10.313 23 [Plutarch] believes that the doctrine of the Divine Providence, and that of the immortality of the soul, rest on one and the same basis.
    Plu 10.314 4 The soul, incapable of death, suffers in the same manner in the body, as birds that are kept in a cage.
    Plu 10.317 13 ...it was [Plutarch's] severe fate to flourish in those days of ignorance, which, 't is a favorable opinion to hope that the Almighty will sometime wink at; that our souls may be with these philosophers together in the same state of bliss.
    LLNE 10.329 5 ...chemistry, which is the analysis of matter, has taught us that we eat gas, drink gas, tread on gas, and are gas. The same decomposition has changed the whole face of physics;...
    LLNE 10.344 20 ...[Theodore Parker's] character appeared in the last moments with the same firm control as in the midday of strength.
    LLNE 10.350 13 ...the good Fourier knew what those creatures [the hyaena, the jackal, the gnat, the bug, the flea] should have been, had not the mould slipped, through the bad state of the atmosphere; caused no doubt by the same vicious imponderable fluids.
    LLNE 10.360 22 [The projectors of Brook Farm] had the feeling that our ways of living were too conventional and expensive...not permitting men to combine cultivation of mind and heart with a reasonable amount of daily labor. At the same time, it was an attempt to lift others with themselves...
    LLNE 10.367 5 The country members [at Brook Farm] naturally were surprised to observe that one man ploughed all day and one looked out of the window all day...and both received at night the same wages.
    CSC 10.373 14 In March [1841], accordingly, a three-day' session [of the Chardon Street Convention] was holden in the same place, on the subject of the Church...
    EzRy 10.383 13 [Ezra Ripley] was identified with the ideas and forms of the New England Church, which expired about the same time with him...
    EzRy 10.385 17 The same faith [in particular providence] made what was strong and what was weak in Dr. Ripley and his associates.
    EzRy 10.385 21 ...if [Ezra Ripley] made his forms a strait-jacket to others, he wore the same himself all his years.
    MMEm 10.424 14 ...in the weary womb [of Time] are prolific numbers of the same sad hour...
    MMEm 10.426 23 The idea of being no mate for those intellectualists I've [Mary Moody Emerson] loved to admire, is no pain. Hereafter the same solitary joy will go with me, were I not to live, as I expect, in the vision of the Infinite.
    SlHr 10.439 27 ...[Samuel Hoar] had a strong, unaffected interest in...the common incidents of rural life. It was just as easy for him to meet on the same floor, and with the same plain courtesy, men of distinction and large ability.
    SlHr 10.440 1 ...[Samuel Hoar] had a strong, unaffected interest in...the common incidents of rural life. It was just as easy for him to meet on the same floor, and with the same plain courtesy, men of distinction and large ability.
    SlHr 10.442 2 ...a plain way [Samuel Hoar] had of putting his statement with all his might, and now and then borrowing the aid of...a farmer's phrase, whose force had imprinted it on his memory, and, by the same token, his hearers were bound to remember his point.
    SlHr 10.443 26 Such was, in old age, the beauty of [Samuel Hoar's] person and carriage, as if the mind radiated, and made the same impression of probity on all beholders.
    Thor 10.452 14 ...whilst all his companions were...eager to begin some lucrative employment, it was inevitable that [Thoreau's] thoughts should be exercised on the same question...
    Thor 10.454 20 I am often reminded, [Thoreau] wrote in his journal, that if I had bestowed on me the wealth of Croesus, my aims must be still the same, and my means essentially the same.
    Thor 10.454 21 I am often reminded, [Thoreau] wrote in his journal, that if I had bestowed on me the wealth of Croesus, my aims must be still the same, and my means essentially the same.
    Thor 10.463 22 [Thoreau] noted what repeatedly befell him, that, after receiving from a distance a rare plant, he would presently find the same in his own haunts.
    Thor 10.477 20 ...the same isolation which belonged to his original thinking and living detached [Thoreau] from the social religious forms.
    Thor 10.484 8 There is a flower known to botanists, one of the same genus with our summer plant called Life-Everlasting...which grows on the most inaccessible cliffs of the Tyrolese mountains...
    GSt 10.505 23 These interests, which [George Stearns] passionately adopted, inevitably led him into personal communication with patriotic persons holding the same views...
    LS 11.5 14 In St. Matthew's Gospel...are recorded the words of Jesus in giving bread and wine on that occasion [the Last Supper] to his disciples, but no expression occurs intimating that this feast was hereafter to be commemorated. In St. Mark...the same words are recorded...
    LS 11.5 19 St. Luke...after relating the breaking of the bread [at the Last Supper], has these words: This do in remembrance of me. In St. John, although other occurrences of the same evening are related, this whole transaction is passed over without notice.
    LS 11.9 6 Jesus did not celebrate the Passover, and afterwards the [Last] Supper, but the Supper was the Passover. He did with his disciples exactly what every master of a family in Jerusalem was doing at the same hour with his household.
    LS 11.10 13 [Jesus] permitted himself to be anointed, declaring that it was for his interment. He washed the feet of his disciples. These are admitted to be symbolical actions and expressions. Here [at the Last Supper], in like manner, he calls the bread his body, and bids the disciples eat. He had used the same expression repeatedly before.
    LS 11.23 25 ...I have proposed to the brethren of the Church to drop the use of the elements and the claim of authority in the administration of this ordinance [the Lord's Supper], and have suggested a mode in which a meeting for the same purpose might be held, free of objection.
    HDC 11.40 27 We have records of marriages and deaths, beginning nineteen years after the settlement [of Concord]; and copies of some of the doings of the town in regard to territory, of the same date.
    HDC 11.42 1 At the same date, in 1654, the town [Concord] having divided itself into three districts...ordered that the North quarter are to keep and maintain all their highways and bridges over the great river, in their quarter...
    HDC 11.45 19 [The settlers] were to settle the internal constitution of the towns, and, at the same time, their power in the commonwealth.
    HDC 11.46 9 ...[John Winthrop] advised, seeing the freemen were grown so numerous, to send deputies from every town once in a year to revise the laws and to assess all monies. And the General Court, thus constituted, only needed to go into separate session from the Council, as they did in 1644, to become essentially the same assembly they are to this day.
    HDC 11.46 14 ...Concord and the other plantations found themselves separate and independent of Boston...enjoying, at the same time, a strict and loving fellowship with Boston...
    HDC 11.58 25 A still more formidable enemy [of Concord] was removed, in the same year [1676], by the capture of Canonchet, the faithful ally of Philip...
    HDC 11.69 26 ...in conjunction with our brethren in America, we...will... with the same resolution, as [George III's] freeborn subjects in this country, to the utmost of our power, defend all our rights inviolate to the latest posterity.
    HDC 11.73 15 Eight hundred British soldiers...at Lexington had fired upon the brave handful of militia, for which a speedy revenge was reaped by the same militia in the afternoon.
    HDC 11.76 4 Captain Charles Miles, who was wounded in the pursuit of the enemy [at Concord bridge] told my venerable friend who sits by me, that he went to the services of that day, with the same seriousness and acknowledgment of God, which he carried to church.
    HDC 11.77 26 To promote the same cause [the American Revolution], [William Emerson] asked, and obtained of the town [Concord], leave to accept the commission of chaplain to the Northern army, at Ticonderoga...
    HDC 11.81 10 In 1786...a large party of armed insurgents arrived in this town [Concord]...to hinder the sitting of the Court of Common Pleas. But they found no countenance here. The same people who had been active in a County Convention to consider grievances, condemned the rebellion...
    EWI 11.117 15 It soon appeared in all the [West Indian] islands that the planters were disposed...to exert the same licentious despotism as before.
    EWI 11.120 3 ...the great island of Jamaica...resolved...to emancipate absolutely on the 1st August, 1838. In British Guiana, in Dominica, the same resolution had been earlier taken with more good will;...
    EWI 11.121 14 ...every man's position [in Jamaica] is settled by the same circumstances which regulate that point in other free countries...
    EWI 11.140 24 In the case of the ship Zong, in 1781, whose master had thrown one hundred and thirty-two slaves alive into the sea...the first jury gave a verdict in favor of the master and owners: they had a right to do what they had done. Lord Mansfield is reported to have said on the bench, The matter left to the jury is,-Was it from necessity? For they had no doubt...that the case of slaves was the same as if horses had been thrown overboard.
    EWI 11.143 23 [Nature] appoints...no rescue for flies and mites but their spawning numbers, which no ravages can overcome. It deals with men after the same manner.
    War 11.154 19 ...[war] is exhibited to us continually in the dumb show of brute nature, where war between tribes, and between individuals of the same tribe, perpetually rages.
    War 11.160 18 The sublime question has startled one and another happy soul in different quarters of the globe,-Cannot love be, as well as hate? Would not love answer the same end...
    War 11.174 12 If peace is to be maintained, it must be by brave men, who have come up to the same height as the hero...
    FSLC 11.179 23 There are men who are as sure indexes of the equity of legislation and of the same state of public feeling, as the barometer is of the weight of the air...
    FSLC 11.191 11 Lord Coke held that where an Act of Parliament is against common right and reason, the common law shall control it, and adjudge it to be void. Chief Justice Hobart, Chief Justice Holt, and Chief Justice Mansfield held the same.
    FSLC 11.197 5 New York advertised in Southern markets that it would go for slavery, and posted the names of merchants who would not. Boston, alarmed, entered into the same design.
    FSLC 11.197 11 Philadelphia...in this auction of the rights of mankind, rescinded all its legislation against slavery. And the Boston Advertiser, and the Courier...urge the same course on the people of Massachusetts.
    FSLN 11.222 25 [Webster] worked with...the same quiet and sure feeling of right to his place that an oak or a mountain have to theirs.
    FSLN 11.225 21 There was the same law in England for Jeffries and Talbot and Yorke to read slavery out of, and for Lord Mansfield to read freedom.
    FSLN 11.226 27 [Webster's 7th of March Speech] was like the doleful speech falsely ascribed to the patriot Brutus: Virtue, I have followed thee through life, and I find thee but a shadow. Here was a question of an immoral law; a question agitated for ages, and settled always in the same way by every great jurist, that an immoral law cannot be valid.
    FSLN 11.234 26 The teachings of the Spirit can be apprehended only by the same spirit that gave them forth.
    AsSu 11.247 17 In [the slave state]...man is an animal...spending his days in hunting and practising with deadly weapons to defend himself against his slaves and against his companions brought up in the same idle and dangerous way.
    AsSu 11.251 4 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.
    TPar 11.292 11 ...you [Theodore Parker] will already be consoled in the transfer of your genius, knowing well that the nature of the world will affirm...that which for twenty-five years you valiantly spoke; that the winds of Italy murmur the same truth over your grave;...
    ACiv 11.303 1 I wish I saw in the people that inspiration which, if government would not obey the same, would leave the government behind...
    ACiv 11.305 4 ...as long as we fight without...any word intimating forfeiture in the rebel states of their old privileges, under the law, [the Southerners] and we fight on the same side, for slavery.
    HCom 11.339 8 These boys we talk about like ancient sages/ Are the same men we read of in old pages-/ The bronze recast of dead heroic ages!/
    SMC 11.375 1 Those who went through those dreadful fields [of the Civil War] and returned not deserve much more than all the honor we can pay. But those also who went through the same fields, and returned alive, put just as much at hazard as those who died...
    EdAd 11.385 11 One would say there is nothing colossal in the country but its geography and its material activities; that the moral and intellectual effects are not on the same scale with the trade and production.
    EdAd 11.387 10 ...the grape on two sides of the same fence has new flavors;...
    EdAd 11.388 7 ...we believe politics to be...subject to the same laws with trees, earths and acids.
    EdAd 11.389 11 Public affairs are chained in the same law with private;...
    Koss 11.400 10 You [Kossuth] have earned your own nobility at home. We [Americans] admit you ad eundem (as they say at College). We admit you to the same degree, without new trial.
    Wom 11.406 23 Plato said, Women are the same as men in faculty, only less in degree.
    Wom 11.406 27 ...the general voice of mankind has agreed...that the same mental height which [women's] husbands attain by toil, they attain by sympathy with their husbands.
    Wom 11.408 10 ...in general, no mastery in either of the fine arts...has yet been obtained by [women], equal to the mastery of men in the same.
    Wom 11.414 15 ...in the East...in the Mohammedan faith, Woman yet occupies the same leading position, as a prophetess, that she has among the ancient Greeks...
    Wom 11.418 16 Men are not to the same degree temperamented [as women]...
    Wom 11.419 11 ...perhaps it is because these people [advocates of women' s rights] have been deprived of...opportunities, such as they wished,- because they feel the same rudeness and disadvantage which offends you,- that they have been stung to say, It is too late for us...but, at least, we will see that the whole race of women shall not suffer as we have suffered.
    Wom 11.421 3 The objection to [women's] voting is the same as is urged... against clergymen who take an active part in politics;...
    Wom 11.424 22 The aspiration of this century will be the code of the next. It holds...of the same influences that make the sun and moon.
    Wom 11.425 19 Improve and refine the men, and you do the same by the women...
    SHC 11.430 19 We will not jealously guard a few atoms under immense marbles, selfishly and impossibly sequestering it from the vast circulations of Nature, but, at the same time...wishing to make one spot tender to our children...
    ChiE 11.472 26 ...what we call the GOLDEN RULE of Jesus, Confucius had uttered in the same terms five hundred years before.
    ChiE 11.473 10 At the same time, [Confucius] abstained from paradox...
    FRO2 11.486 26 ...a man of religious susceptibility, and one at the same time conversant with many men...can find the same idea [that Christianity is as old as Creation] in numberless conversations.
    FRO2 11.487 1 ...a man of religious susceptibility...can find the same idea [that Christianity is as old as Creation] in numberless conversations.
    FRO2 11.490 3 I submit that in sound frame of mind, we read or remember the religious sayings and oracles of other men...only for joy in the social identity which they open to us, and that these words would have no weight with us if we had not the same conviction already.
    CPL 11.499 17 ...[Mary Moody Emerson] writes in her diary, Life truly resembles a river-ever the same-never the same;...
    CPL 11.499 21 ...[Mary Moody Emerson] writes in her diary...perhaps a greater variety of internal emotions would be felt by remaining with books in one place than pursuing the waves which are ever the same.
    CPL 11.503 22 'T is a tie between men to have been delighted with the same book.
    CPL 11.507 10 It is a tie between men to have read the same book...
    CPL 11.507 13 ...it is a disadvantage not to have read the book your mates have read, or not to have read it at the same time...
    FRep 11.526 24 ...instead of the doleful experience of the European economist, who tells us, In almost all countries the condition of the great body of the people is poor and miserable, here that same great body has arrived at a sloven plenty...
    FRep 11.532 8 See how fast [our people] extend the fleeting fabric of their trade...with the same abandonment to the moment and the facts of the hour as the Esquimau who sells his bed in the morning.
    FRep 11.543 1 ...the cosmic results will be the same, whatever the daily events may be.
    PLT 12.3 15 ...I thought-could not a similar [scientific] enumeration be made of the laws and powers of the Intellect, and possess the same claims on the student?
    PLT 12.4 8 [These higher laws]...may be numbered and recorded, like stamens and vertebrae. At the same time they have a deeper interest...
    PLT 12.9 23 Ever since the Norse heaven made the stern terms of admission that a man must do something excellent with his hands or feet... the same demand has been made in Norse earth.
    PLT 12.12 5 ...he who who contents himself with...recording only what facts he has observed...follows...a system as grand as any other, though he... only draws that arc which he clearly sees, or perhaps at a later observation a remote curve of the same orbit...
    PLT 12.13 4 Metaphysics is dangerous as a single pursuit. We should feel more confidence in the same results from the mouth of a man of the world.
    PLT 12.15 24 [Intellect] is as the light, public and entire to each, and on the same terms.
    PLT 12.18 1 ...as the sun is conceived to have made our system by hurling out from itself the outer rings of diffuse ether which slowly condensed into earths and moons, by a higher force of the same law the mind detaches minds...
    PLT 12.22 3 If man has organs...for reproduction and love and care of his young, you shall find all the same in the muskrat.
    PLT 12.23 8 The momentum, which increases by exact laws in falling bodies, increases by the same rate in the intellectual action.
    PLT 12.23 14 ...it is the common remark of the student, Could I only have begun with the same fire which I had on the last day, I should have done something.
    PLT 12.23 24 ...A body in the act of combination or decomposition enables another body, with which it may be in contact, to enter into the same state.
    PLT 12.25 9 The fine tree continues to grow. The same thing happens in the man.
    PLT 12.34 3 Each man has a feeling that what is done anywhere is done by the same wit as his.
    PLT 12.34 10 We feel as if one man wrote all the books, painted, built, in dark ages; and we are sure that it can do more than ever was done. It was the same mind that built the world.
    PLT 12.41 3 ...a thought, properly speaking,-that is a truth held...because we have perceived it is a fact in the nature of things, and in all times and places will and must be the same thing,-is of inestimable value.
    PLT 12.43 5 I owe to genius always the same debt, of lifting the curtain from the common...
    PLT 12.45 10 There is indeed this vice about men of thought, that you cannot quite trust them; not as much as other men of the same natural probity, without intellect;...
    PLT 12.47 1 A man tries to speak [the truth] and his voice is...rude and chiding. The truth is not spoken but injured. The same thing happens in power to do the right.
    PLT 12.48 13 ...idea and execution are not often intrusted to the same head.
    PLT 12.49 9 I once found Page the painter modelling his figures in clay... before he painted them on canvas. Dante, one would say, did the same thing before he wrote the verses.
    PLT 12.49 25 The same functions which are perfect in our quadrupeds are seen slower performed in palaeontology.
    PLT 12.51 5 You laugh at the monotones, at the men of one idea, but if we look nearly at heroes we may find the same poverty;...
    PLT 12.54 17 [The tree or the brook]...makes one and the same impression and effect at all times.
    PLT 12.59 23 The same course continues itself in the mind which we have witnessed in Nature...
    II 12.74 21 ...the ancient Proclus seems to signify his sense of the same fact, by saying, The parts in us are more the property of wholes, and of things above us, than they are our property.
    II 12.75 25 That virtue which was never taught us, we cannot teach others. They must be taught by the same schoolmaster.
    II 12.76 2 ...the moral sense reappears forever with the same angelic newness that has been from of old the fountain of poetry and beauty and strength.
    II 12.81 17 [Men] all share, to the rankest Philistines, the same belief.
    II 12.89 6 [A man] finds that events spring from the same root as persons;...
    Mem 12.90 17 The sparrow, the ant, the worm, have the same memory as we.
    Mem 12.97 22 A knife with a good spring...a watch, the teeth or jaws of which fit and play perfectly, as compared with the same tools when badly put together, describe to us the difference between a person of quick and strong perception...and a heavy man who witnesses the same facts...
    Mem 12.97 27 A knife with a good spring, a forceps...the teeth or jaws of which fit and play perfectly, as compared with the same tools when badly put together, describe to us the difference between a person of quick and strong perception...and a heavy man who witnesses the same facts...
    Mem 12.98 1 A knife with a good spring, a forceps...the teeth or jaws of which fit and play perfectly, as compared with the same tools when badly put together, describe to us the difference between a person of quick and strong perception...and a heavy man who...shares experiences like theirs. 'T is like the impression made by the same stamp in sand or in wax.
    CInt 12.120 10 ...I value [talent] more...when the talent is...in harmony with the public sentiment of mankind. Such is the patriotism of Demosthenes, of Patrick Henry...strong by the strength of the facts themselves. Then the orator is still one of the audience, persuaded by the same reasons which persuade them;...
    CInt 12.122 16 Instinct is the name for...that feeling which each has that what is done by any man or agent is done by the same wit as his.
    CInt 12.122 25 We feel as if one man wrote all the books...in dark ages, and we are sure we can do more than ever was done. It was the same mind that built the world.
    CL 12.141 5 The air, said Anaximenes, is the soul, and the essence of life. By breathing it, we become intelligent, and, because we breathe the same air, understand one another.
    CL 12.147 24 ...the forest awakes in [the man growing old against his will] the same feeling it did when he was a boy...
    CL 12.151 9 ...the oak and maple are red with the same colors on the new leaf which they will resume in autumn when it is ripe.
    CL 12.153 13 At Niagara, I have noticed, that, as quick as I got out of the wetting of the Fall, all the grandeur changed into beauty. You cannot keep it grand, 't is so quickly beautiful; and the sea gave me the same experience.
    Bost 12.186 4 What Vasari said...of the republican city of Florence might be said of Boston; that the desire for glory and honor is powerfully generated by the air of that place, in the men of every profession; whereby all who possess talent are impelled to struggle that they may not remain in the same grade with those whom they perceive to be only men like themselves...
    Bost 12.188 6 It was said of Rome in its proudest days...the extent of the city and of the world is the same...
    Bost 12.192 7 In the journey of Rev. Peter Bulkeley and his company through the forest from Boston to Concord they fainted from the powerful odor of the stweefern in the sun;-like what befell, still earlier, Biorn and Thorfinn, Northmen, in their expedition to the same coast;...
    Bost 12.210 25 ...in Boston, Nature...has given good sons to good sires, or at least continued merit in the same blood.
    MAng1 12.221 14 When Michael Angelo would begin a statue, he made first on paper the skeleton; afterwards, upon another paper, the same figure clothed with muscles.
    MAng1 12.227 7 Michael [Angelo]...constructed a movable platform to rest and roll upon the floor [of the Sistine Chapel], which is believed to be the same simple contrivance which is used in Rome, at this day, to repair the walls of churches.
    MAng1 12.234 6 [Michelangelo] did not only build a divine temple, and paint and carve saints and prophets. He lived out the same inspiration.
    MAng1 12.234 19 [Michelangelo] saw clearly that if the corrupt and vulgar eyes that could see nothing but indecorum in his terrific prophets and angels could be purified as his own were pure, they would only find occasion for devotion in the same figures.
    MAng1 12.242 8 In conversing upon this subject [death] with one of his friends, that person remarked that Michael [Angelo] might well grieve that one who was incessant in his creative labors should have no restoration. No, replied Michael...if life pleases us, death, being a work of the same master, ought not to displease us.
    Milt1 12.247 24 It was very easy to remark an altered tone in the criticism when Milton reappeared as an author, fifteen years ago, from any that had been bestowed on the same subject before.
    Milt1 12.254 27 ...we think it impossible to recall one in those countries [England, France, Germany] who communicates the same vibration of hope, of self-reverence, of piety, of delight in beauty, which the name of Milton awakens.
    Milt1 12.255 13 Addison, Pope, Hume and Johnson, students...of the same subject [human nature], cannot, taken together, make any pretension to the amount or the quality of Milton's inspirations.
    ACri 12.290 19 A good writer must convey the feeling of a flamboyant witness, and at the same time of chemic selection...
    MLit 12.329 11 [We can fancy Goethe saying to himself] That all shall right itself in the long Morrow, I may well allow, and my novel [Wilhelm Meister] may wait for the same regeneration.
    MLit 12.329 16 [We can fancy Goethe saying to himself] I have given my characters [in Wilhelm Meister] a bias to error. Men have the same.
    MLit 12.330 3 ...because Nature is moral, that mind only can see, in which the same order entirely obtains.
    Pray 12.355 26 Let these few scattered leaves, which a chance...brought under our eye nearly at the same moment, stand as an example of innumerable similar expressions [prayers] which no mortal witness has reported...
    Pray 12.356 15 [I, Augustine, entered my soul and saw] Not this vulgar light which all flesh may look upon, nor as it were a greater of the same kind...
    EurB 12.366 4 The Pindar, the Shakspeare, the Dante...have...the eye to see...the test-objects of the microscope, and then the tongue to utter the same things in words...
    EurB 12.370 2 ...notwithstanding all Wordsworth's grand merits, it was a great pleasure to know that Alfred Tennyson's two volumes were coming out in the same ship;...
    EurB 12.371 1 ...[modern painters]...paint for their predecessors' public. It seems as if the same vice had worked in poetry.
    EurB 12.372 12 ...it is strange that one of the best poems [Abou ben Adhem] should be written by a man [Leigh Hunt] who has hardly written any other. And Godiva is a parable which belongs to the same gospel.
    EurB 12.372 20 Ulysses [Tennyson] belongs to a high class of poetry, destined...to be more cultivated in the next generation. Oenone was a sketch of the same kind.
    PPr 12.386 15 One can hardly credit, whilst under the spell of this magician [Carlyle], that the world always had the same bankrupt look, to foregoing ages as to us...
    Let 12.399 8 ...this class [of over-educated youth] is rapidly increasing by the infatuation of the active class, who...educate their own children in the same courses...
    Let 12.399 10 ...this class [of over-educated youth] is rapidly increasing by the infatuation of the active class, who...use all possible endeavors to secure to [their children] the same result.
    Trag 12.407 1 The bitterest tragic element in life to be derived from an intellectual source is the belief in a brute Fate or Destiny; the belief that the order of Nature and events is controlled by a law...which holds on its way to the end, serving [man] if his wishes chance to lie in the same course...
    Trag 12.407 10 The same idea [of Fate] makes the paralyzing terror with which the East Indian mythology haunts the imagination.
    Trag 12.407 12 The same thought [of Fate] is the predestination of the Turk.
    Trag 12.407 16 ...universally, in uneducated and unreflecting persons...we discover traits of the same superstition [belief in Fate]...

same, n. (1)

    PPh 4.56 3 Art expresses the one or the same by the different.

Same, n. (3)

    PPh 4.49 17 The Same, the Same: friend and foe are of one stuff;...
    PPh 4.62 11 ...the Asia in [Plato's] mind was first heartily honored,--the ocean of love and power...the Same, the Good, the One;...
    EdAd 11.382 7 The old men studied magic in the flowers,/ And human fortunes in astronomy,/ And an omnipotence in chemistry,/ Preferring things to names, for these were men,/ Were unitarians of the united world,/ And, wheresoever their clear eye-beams fell,/ They caught the footsteps of the Same./

sameness, n. (1)

    CPL 11.507 18 ...it is a disadvantage not to have read the book your mates have read...so that...you shall understand their allusions to it, and not give it more or less emphasis than they do. Yet the strong character does not need this sameness of culture.

Samos, Greece, n. (1)

    Tran 1.350 18 All that the brave Xanthus brings home from his wars is the recollection that at the storming of Samos, in the heat of the battle, Pericles smiled on me, and passed on to another detachment.

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