Thing to Things
A Concordance to the Collected Essays of Ralph Waldo Emerson Compiled by Eugene F. Irey
thing, n. (388)
Nat 1.41 13 When a thing has served an end to the
uttermost, it is wholly
new for an ulterior service.
Nat 1.41 19 ...a thing is good only so far as it
serves;...
Nat 1.45 6 The wise man, in doing one thing, does
all;...
Nat 1.45 7 ...in the one thing [the wise man] does
rightly, he sees the
likeness of all which is done rightly.
Nat 1.68 11 Nor has science sufficient humanity, so
long as the naturalist
overlooks that wonderful congruity which subsists between man and the
world; of which he is lord...because he...finds something of himself in
every
great and small thing...
AmS 1.83 19 Man is thus metamorphosed into a thing...
AmS 1.85 16 To the young mind every thing is
individual...
AmS 1.90 3 The one thing in the world, of value, is the
active soul.
AmS 1.96 24 In its grub state...[the new deed] is a
dull grub. But suddenly, without observation, the selfsame thing
unfurls beautiful wings...
AmS 1.104 5 ...fear is a thing which a scholar by his
very function puts
behind him.
AmS 1.105 11 ...in proportion as a man has any thing in
him divine, the
firmament flows before him...
AmS 1.105 18 They are the kings of the world
who...persuade men...that
this thing which they do is the apple which the ages have desired to
pluck...
AmS 1.105 21 The great man makes the great thing.
AmS 1.109 17 ...we cannot enjoy any thing for hankering
to know whereof
the pleasure consists;...
AmS 1.109 22 Sight is the last thing to be pitied.
AmS 1.112 16 Goethe, in this very thing the most modern
of the moderns, has shown us...the genius of the ancients.
AmS 1.113 13 Every thing that tends to insulate the
individual...tends to
true union as well as greatness.
DSA 1.148 26 The silence that accepts merit as the most
natural thing in the
world, is the highest applause.
DSA 1.151 22 I look for the new Teacher that shall
follow so far those
shining laws that he...shall show that the Ought, that Duty, is one
thing with
Science...
LE 1.170 13 Greek history is one thing to me; another
to you.
LE 1.173 10 ...thought renews itself inexhaustibly
every day, and the thing
whereon it shines...
LE 1.181 9 Let [the scholar] know that...in the
sedulous inquiry...to know
how the thing stands;...the secret of the world is to be learned...
MN 1.213 27 You will not understand [the Intelligible]
as when
understanding some particular thing...
MN 1.219 4 Genius...advertises us...that it knows so
deeply and speaks so
musically, because it is itself a mutation of the thing it describes.
MN 1.223 18 ...this one thing I know, that these
qualities did not now begin
to exist...
MR 1.230 11 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.
LT 1.280 5 ...if I treat all men as gods, how to me can
there be any such
thing as a slave?
LT 1.282 21 We find it the worst thing about time that
we know not what
to do with it.
Con 1.306 14 ...[the youth] is met by warnings on every
hand that this thing
and that thing have owners...
Tran 1.329 1 The first thing we have to say respecting
what are called new
views here in New England...is, that they are not new...
Tran 1.332 10 One thing at least, [the materialist]
says, is certain...that
figures do not lie;...
Tran 1.338 2 ...there is no such thing as a
Transcendental party;...
Tran 1.350 5 I do not wish to do one thing but once.
Tran 1.350 13 Every thing admonishes us how needlessly
long life is.
YA 1.374 26 ...one thing is certain, that we who build
will receive the very
smallest share of benefit.
YA 1.381 16 All this drudgery...to end in mortgages and
the auctioneer's
flag, and removing from bad to worse. It is time to have the thing
looked
into...
YA 1.390 16 We cannot give our life to the cause...of
the pauper, as another
is doing; but to one thing we are bound, not to blaspheme the sentiment
and
the work of that man...
YA 1.391 22 One thing is plain for all men of common
sense and common
conscience...
YA 1.392 21 ...it is one thing to visit the Pyramids,
and another to wish to
live there.
YA 1.393 5 One thing for instance, the beauties of
aristocracy, we
commend to the study of the travelling American.
Hist 2.8 15 Every thing tends in a wonderful manner to
abbreviate itself
and yield its own virtue to [each man].
Hist 2.23 16 Every thing the individual sees without
him corresponds to his
states of mind...
Hist 2.23 18 ...every thing is in turn intelligible to
[the individual], as his
onward thinking leads him into the truth to which that fact or series
belongs.
Hist 2.33 15 See in Goethe's Helena the same desire
that every word
should be a thing.
SR 2.51 2 A man is to carry himself...as if every thing
were titular and
ephemeral but he.
SR 2.54 26 Do I not know that with all this ostentation
of examining the
grounds of the institution [the preacher] will do no such thing?
SR 2.57 24 ...to-morrow speak what to-morrow thinks in
hard words again, though it contradict every thing you said to-day.
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 2.65 17 [Thoughtless people] fancy that I choose to
see this or that thing.
SR 2.65 27 It must be that when God speaketh he should
communicate, not
one thing, but all things;...
SR 2.66 26 ...history is an impertinence and an injury
if it be any thing
more than a cheerful apologue or parable of my being and becoming.
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 25 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 2.82 21 [The work of art] was an application of [the
artist's] own
thought to the thing to be done...
SR 2.82 26 ...if the American artist will study...the
precise thing to be done
by him...he will create a house in which [beauty, convenience, grandeur
of
thought] will find themselves fitted...
SR 2.84 16 For every thing that is given something is
taken.
Comp 2.97 5 ...each thing is a half, and suggests
another thing to make it
whole;...
Comp 2.98 13 For every thing you have missed, you have
gained
something else;...
Comp 2.98 15 ...for every thing you gain, you lose
something.
Comp 2.101 3 Every thing in nature contains all the
powers of nature.
Comp 2.101 4 Every thing is made of one hidden
stuff;...
Comp 2.103 1 Every act rewards itself...in a twofold
manner; first in the
thing, or in real nature; and secondly in the circumstance, or in
apparent
nature.
Comp 2.103 4 The causal retribution is in the thing and
is seen by the soul.
Comp 2.103 7 The retribution in the circumstance...is
inseparable from the
thing...
Comp 2.107 8 There is a crack in every thing God has
made.
Comp 2.111 23 One thing [Fear] teaches, that there is
rottenness where he
appears.
Comp 2.112 18 Has a man gained any thing who has
received a hundred
favors and rendered none?
Comp 2.113 4 [The borrower] may soon come to see...that
the highest price
he can pay for a thing is to ask for it.
Comp 2.113 19 He is base,--and that is the one base
thing in the universe,-- to receive favors and render none.
Comp 2.114 27 The law of nature is, Do the thing, and
you shall have the
power;...
Comp 2.115 2 ...they who do not the thing have not the
power.
Comp 2.115 8 ...the doctrine that every thing has its
price...is not less
sublime in the columns of a leger than in the budgets of states...
Comp 2.115 9 ...the doctrine that every thing has its
price,--and if that price
is not paid, not that thing but something else is obtained...is not
less
sublime in the columns of a leger than in the budgets of states...
Comp 2.116 19 The good man has absolute good, which
like fire turns
every thing to its own nature...
Comp 2.119 2 ...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.
Comp 2.120 13 Every thing has two sides, a good and an
evil.
SL 2.132 21 It is quite another thing that [a man]
should be able to give
account of his faith...
SL 2.138 10 Every man sees that he is that middle point
whereof every
thing may be affirmed and denied with equal reason.
SL 2.142 20 Foolish, whenever you take the meanness and
formality of that
thing you do...
SL 2.142 25 We...do not perceive that any thing man can
do may be
divinely done.
SL 2.152 26 ...the thing uttered in words is not
therefore affirmed.
SL 2.155 10 ...[what the great man did] was the most
natural thing in the
world...
SL 2.155 12 ...now, every thing [the great man]
did...looks large...
SL 2.156 3 ...the mere air of doing a thing...expresses
character.
SL 2.157 22 If a man know that he can do any thing...he
has a pledge of the
acknowledgement of that fact by all persons.
SL 2.159 15 If you would not be known to do any thing,
never do it.
SL 2.163 20 The poor mind does not seem to itself to be
any thing unless it
have an outside badge...
Lov1 2.171 18 Every thing is beautiful seen from the
point of the intellect, or as truth.
Fdsp 2.195 26 Every thing that is [our
friend's]...fancy enhances.
Fdsp 2.201 13 When [friendships] are real, they
are...the solidest thing we
know.
Fdsp 2.212 1 Who set you to cast about what you should
say to the select
souls, or how to say any thing to such?
Prd1 2.222 26 A third class live above the beauty of
the symbol to the
beauty of the thing signified;...
Prd1 2.223 22 ...culture...aiming at the perfection of
the man as the end, degrades every thing else...into means.
Prd1 2.235 15 ...every thing in nature, even motes and
feathers, go by law
and not by luck...
Prd1 2.236 21 ...every fact hath its roots in the soul,
and if the soul were
changed would cease to be, or would become some other thing...
Hsm1 2.251 2 ...for the hero that thing he does is the
highest deed...
Hsm1 2.256 15 The great will not condescend to take any
thing seriously;...
OS 2.269 13 ...the act of seeing and the thing
seen...are one.
OS 2.278 10 We owe many valuable observations to
people...who say the
thing without effort which we want...
OS 2.280 11 If we...see how the thing stands in God, we
know the
particular thing, and every thing, and every man.
OS 2.280 12 If we...see how the thing stands in God, we
know the
particular thing, and every thing, and every man.
OS 2.282 25 The soul answers never by words, but by the
thing itself that is
inquired after.
Cir 2.303 20 Every thing is medial.
Cir 2.306 23 What I write, whilst I write it, seems the
most natural thing in
the world;...
Cir 2.318 12 Do not set the least value on what I do,
or the least discredit
on what I do not, as if I pretended to settle any thing as true or
false.
Cir 2.320 24 Now for the first time seem I to know any
thing rightly.
Cir 2.321 21 The one thing which we seek with
insatiable desire is to forget
ourselves...
Int 2.346 26 Well assured that their speech is
intelligible and the most
natural thing in the world, [the Greek philosophers] add thesis to
thesis...
Art1 2.354 12 Until one thing comes out from the
connection of things, there can be enjoyment, contemplation, but no
thought.
Art1 2.355 12 ...each work of genius...concentrates
attention on itself. For
the time, it is the only thing worth naming to do that...
Art1 2.355 20 I should think fire the best thing in the
world, if I were not
acquainted with air, and water, and earth.
Art1 2.357 4 If [the artist] can draw every thing, why
draw any thing?...
Art1 2.367 2 ...the hand can never execute any thing
higher than the
character can inspire.
Pt1 3.10 2 ...it is not metres, but a metre-making
argument that makes a
poem,--a thought so passionate and alive that...it has an architecture
of its
own, and adorns nature with a new thing.
Pt1 3.15 3 ...every thing in nature answers to a moral
power...
Pt1 3.22 11 ...the poet names the thing because he sees
it...
Pt1 3.25 8 ...as the form of the thing is reflected by
the eye, so the soul of
the thing is reflected by a melody.
Pt1 3.25 9 ...the soul of the thing is reflected by a
melody.
Pt1 3.41 5 ...the rich poets, as Homer, Chaucer,
Shakspeare, and Raphael... resemble a mirror carried through the
street, ready to render an image of
every created thing.
Exp 3.48 14 The only thing grief has taught me is to
know how shallow it
is.
Exp 3.56 11 A deduction must be made from the opinion
which even the
wise express on a new book or occurrence. Their opinion...is nowise to
be
trusted as the lasting relation between that intellect and that thing.
Exp 3.67 12 To-morrow again every thing looks real and
angular...
Exp 3.69 6 ...every thing [is] impossible until we see
a success.
Exp 3.76 9 ...every evil and every good thing is a
shadow which we cast.
Chr1 3.90 23 ...Hercules...conquered whether he stood,
or walked, or sat, or whatever thing he did.
Mrs1 3.133 24 ...the first thing man requires of man is
reality...
Mrs1 3.149 7 A man is but a little thing in the midst
of the objects of
nature...
Mrs1 3.153 11 The worth of the thing signified must
vindicate our taste for
the emblem.
Nat2 3.178 17 The critics who complain of the sickly
separation of the
beauty of nature from the thing to be done, must consider that our
hunting
of the picturesque is inseparable from our protest against false
society.
Nat2 3.186 4 The child...delighted with every new
thing, lies down at night
overpowered by the fatigue which this day of continual pretty madness
has
incurred.
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.
NR 3.236 16 You are one thing, but Nature is one thing
and the other thing, in the same moment.
NR 3.236 17 You are one thing, but Nature is one thing
and the other thing, in the same moment.
NR 3.239 11 ...it is so much easier to do what one has
done before than to
do a new thing, that there is a perpetual tendency to a set mode.
NR 3.244 3 When [a man] has exhausted for the time the
nourishment to be
drawn from any one person or thing, that object is withdrawn from his
observation...
NR 3.244 20 What is best in each kind is an index of
what should be the
average of that thing.
NR 3.245 16 All the universe over, there is but one
thing, this old Two-Face... of which any proposition may be affirmed or
denied.
NER 3.257 16 ...we are shut up in schools, and
colleges, and recitation-rooms, for ten or fifteen years, and come out
at last with...a memory of
words, and do not know a thing.
NER 3.261 13 The criticism and attack on
institutions...has made one thing
plain...
NER 3.282 21 I am not pained that I cannot frame a
reply to the question, What is the operation we call Providence? There
lies the unspoken thing, present, omnipresent.
NER 3.283 25 The reward of a thing well done, is to
have done it.
UGM 4.6 20 ...every one can do his best thing easiest.
UGM 4.9 10 A man is a centre for nature, running out
threads of relation
through every thing...
UGM 4.9 16 Each plant has its parasite, and each
created thing its lover
and poet.
UGM 4.10 21 The table of logarithms is one thing, and
its vital play in
botany, music, optics and architecture another.
UGM 4.11 5 We speak now only of...the way in which [the
sciences] seem
to fascinate and draw to them some genius who occupies himself with one
thing, all his life long.
UGM 4.11 7 Each material thing has its celestial
side;...
UGM 4.11 21 The reason why [man] knows about [things]
is that he is of
them; he has just come out of nature, or from being a part of that
thing.
UGM 4.28 18 ...nature wishes every thing to remain
itself;...
PPh 4.41 27 ...[the great man] can dispose of every
thing.
PPh 4.45 11 This perpetual modernness is the measure of
merit in every
work of art; since the author of it was not misled by any thing
short-lived or
local...
PPh 4.54 22 ...whether a swarm of bees settled on his
lips, or not;--a man [Plato] who could see two sides of a thing was
born.
PPh 4.57 4 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 4.60 8 ...philosophy is an elegant thing, if any
one modestly meddles
with it [said Plato];...
PPh 4.61 24 [Plato] could prostrate himself on the
earth and cover his eyes
whilst he adored...that of which every thing can be affirmed and
denied...
PPh 4.69 8 ...every thought and thing restores us an
image and creature of
the supreme Good.
PPh 4.71 25 [Socrates]...thought every thing in Athens
a little better than
anything in any other place.
PPh 4.75 1 Crito bribed the jailer; but Socrates would
not go out by
treachery. Whatever inconvenience ensue, nothing is to be preferred
before
justice. These things I hear like pipes and drums, whose sound makes me
deaf to every thing you say.
PPh 4.76 22 ...[Plato] has said one thing in one place,
and the reverse of it
in another place.
PPh 4.77 2 Here is the world...perfect...not a mark of
haste, or botching, or
second thought; but [Plato's] theory of the world is a thing of shreds
and
patches.
PNR 4.84 21 ...the fine which the good, refusing to
govern, ought to pay [affirms Plato], is, to be governed by a worse
man; that his guards shall not
handle gold and silver, but shall be instructed that there is gold and
silver in
their souls, which will make men willing to give them every thing which
they need.
SwM 4.93 23 Wherever the sentiment of right comes in,
it takes precedence
of every thing else.
SwM 4.96 11 The soul having been often born...having
beheld the things
which are here, those which are in heaven and those which are beneath,
there is nothing of which she has not gained the knowledge: no wonder
that
she is able to recollect, in regard to any one thing, what formerly she
knew.
SwM 4.96 16 ...the soul having heretofore known all,
nothing hinders but
that any man who has recalled to mind...one thing only, should of
himself
recover all his ancient knowledge...
SwM 4.109 1 Every thing, at the end of one use, is
taken up into the next...
SwM 4.109 6 ...every thing at the end of one use is
lifted into a superior...
SwM 4.116 14 ...if we choose to express any natural
truth in physical and
definite vocal terms [says Swedenborg], and to convert these terms only
into the corresponding and spiritual terms, we shall...elicit a
spiritual truth
or theological dogma, in place of the physical truth or precept:
although no
mortal would have predicted that any thing of the kind could possibly
arise
by bare literal transposition;...
SwM 4.121 18 Every thing must be taken genially...
SwM 4.121 20 ...we must be at the top of our condition
to understand any
thing rightly.
SwM 4.125 12 [To Swedenborg] Nothing can resist states:
every thing
gravitates...
SwM 4.125 15 [To Swedenborg] Every thing is as I am.
SwM 4.139 2 Every thing is superficial and perishes but
love and truth only.
SwM 4.140 10 The illuminated Quakers explained their
Light, not as
somewhat which leads to any action, but it appears as an obstruction to
any
thing unfit.
MoS 4.157 16 ...there is no practical question on which
any thing more than
an approximate solution can be had?
MoS 4.161 9 Every thing that is excellent in
mankind...[the wise skeptic] will see and judge.
MoS 4.168 2 The Essays...are an entertaining soliloquy
on every random
topic that comes into [Montaigne's] head; treating every thing without
ceremony, yet with masculine sense.
MoS 4.177 18 I can reason down or deny every thing,
except this perpetual
Belly...
MoS 4.185 10 Things seem to say one thing, and say the
reverse.
ShP 4.189 14 A poet is no rattle-brain, saying what
comes uppermost, because he says every thing, saying at last something
good;...
ShP 4.191 6 Choose any other thing...and [the great
man] would have all to
do for himself...
ShP 4.199 14 Is there at last in [the writer's] breast
a Delphi whereof to ask
concerning any thought or thing, whether it be verily so, yea or
nay?...
ShP 4.212 23 [A man of talents] crams this part and
starves that other part, consulting not the fitness of the thing, but
his fitness and strength.
ShP 4.214 2 ...[Shakespeare] is the chief example to
prove that...more or
fewer pictures, is a thing indifferent.
NMW 4.232 19 I have gained some advantages over
superior forces and
when totally destitute of every thing [Bonaparte writes to the
Directory], because...my actions were as prompt as my thoughts.
NMW 4.233 15 [Napoleon] is firm, sure...sacrificing
every thing...to his
aim;...
NMW 4.234 5 Horrible anecdotes may no doubt be
collected from [Napoleon's] history, of the price at which he bought
his successes; but he
must not therefore be set down as cruel...not bloodthirsty, not
cruel,--but
woe to what thing or person stood in his way!
NMW 4.235 17 [Napoleon] risked every thing and spared
nothing...
NMW 4.235 20 We like to see every thing do its office
after its kind...
NMW 4.237 26 Every thing depended on the nicety of
[Napoleon's] combinations...
NMW 4.242 25 ...even when the majority of the people
had begun to ask
whether they had really gained any thing under the exhausting levies of
men and money of the new master [Napoleon], the whole talent of the
country...took his part...
NMW 4.251 5 Believe me, [Bonaparte] said...we had
better leave off all
these remedies: life is a fortress which neither you nor I know any
thing
about.
NMW 4.252 27 The consternation of the dull and
conservative classes, the
terror of the foolish old men and old women of the Roman conclave, who
in
their despair took hold of any thing...make [Napoleon's] history bright
and
commanding.
NMW 4.255 20 ...[Napoleon]...rubbed his hands with joy
when he had
intercepted some morsel of intelligence concerning the men and women
about him, boasting that he knew every thing;...
GoW 4.274 17 [Goethe] writes in the plainest and lowest
tone...putting ever
a thing for a word.
GoW 4.276 14 Goethe would have no word that does not
cover a thing.
GoW 4.277 4 ...[Goethe]...looked for [the Devil]...in
every shade of
coldness, selfishness and unbelief that...darkens over the human
thought,-- and found that the portrait gained reality and terror by
every thing he added
and by every thing he took away.
ET1 5.9 24 The thing done avails [to Landor], and not
what is said about it.
ET1 5.15 15 [Carlyle] was...full of lively anecdote and
with a streaming
humor which floated every thing he looked upon.
ET1 5.16 18 The best thing [Carlyle] knew of that
country [America] was
that in it a man can have meat for his labor.
ET1 5.21 2 [Wordsworth] said he talked on political
aspects, for he wished
to impress on me and all good Americans...never to call into action the
physical strength of the people, as had just now been done in England
in the
Reform Bill,--a thing prophesied by Delolme.
ET2 5.28 6 It is impossible not to personify a ship;
every body does, in
every thing they say...
ET2 5.28 11 ...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.
ET4 5.47 18 ...no genius can long or often utter any
thing which is not
invited and gladly entertained by men around him.
ET4 5.54 20 I found plenty of well-marked English
types...a Norman type, with the complacency that belongs to that
constitution. Others who might
be Americans, for any thing that appeared in their complexion or
form;...
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 5.95 4 The agriculturist Bakewell created sheep and
cows and horses
to order, and breeds in which every thing was omitted but what is
economical.
ET5 5.96 15 The English trade does not exist for the
exportation of native
products, but on its manufactures, or the making well every thing which
is
ill-made elsewhere.
ET6 5.102 9 ...the one thing the English value is
pluck.
ET6 5.102 15 ...the Times newspaper they say is the
pluckiest thing in
England...
ET6 5.103 22 ...one thing is plain, [England] is no
country for fainthearted
people;...
ET6 5.112 19 [The English] avoid every thing marked.
ET6 5.113 1 [The English] avoid pretension and go right
to the heart of the
thing.
ET6 5.113 6 [The English] value themselves on the
absence of every thing
theatrical in the public business...
ET6 5.114 27 ...the usage of a dress-dinner every day
at dark has a
tendency to hive and produce to advantage every thing good [in
table-talk].
ET6 5.115 3 ...[at an English dress-dinner] one meets
now and then with
polished men who know every thing, have tried every thing, and can do
every thing...
ET6 5.115 4 ...[at an English dress-dinner] one meets
now and then with
polished men who know every thing, have tried every thing, and can do
every thing...
ET7 5.122 3 See [the Irish], [the English] said, one
hundred and twenty-seven
all voting like sheep, never proposing any thing...
ET7 5.126 1 The Italian is subtle, the Spaniard
treacherous: tortures, it is
said, could never wrest from an Egyptian the confession of a secret.
None
of these traits belong to the Englishman. His choler and conceit force
every
thing out.
ET8 5.133 15 It was no bad description of the Briton
generically, what was
said two hundred years ago of one particular Oxford scholar: He was a
very
bold man, uttered any thing that came into his mind...
ET9 5.145 12 A much older traveller...says:--The
English are great lovers
of themselves and of every thing belonging to them.
ET9 5.145 20 A much older traveller...says... ...
...whenever [the English] partake of any delicacy with a foreigner,
they ask him whether such a thing
is made in his country.
ET10 5.155 2 ...Mr. Wortley said, though, in the higher
ranks, to cultivate
family affections was a good thing, it was not so among the lower
orders.
ET10 5.155 17 From the Exchequer and the East India
House to the
huckster's shop, every thing [in England] prospers because it is
solvent.
ET13 5.221 5 So far is [the English gentleman] from
attaching any
meaning to the words, that he believes himself to have done almost the
generous thing, and that it is very condescending in him to pray to
God.
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 5.247 1 Thackeray finds that God has made no
allowance for the
poor thing in his universe...
F 6.1 12 ...the prevision is allied/ Unto the thing so
signified;/...
F 6.6 3 The Destinee.../ So strong it is, that though
the world had sworne/
The contrary of a thing by yea or nay,/ Yet sometime it shall fallen on
a
day/ That falleth not oft in a thousand yeer;/...
F 6.9 12 A dome of brow denotes one thing...
F 6.30 4 The one serious and formidable thing in nature
is a will.
F 6.40 15 All the toys that infatuate men...are the
selfsame thing...
Pow 6.54 4 All successful men have agreed in one
thing,--they were
causationists.
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 14 The craft of the merchant is this bringing
a thing from where
it abounds to where it is costly.
Wth 6.92 24 The case of the young lawyer was pitiful to
disgust,--a paltry
matter of buttons or tweezer-cases; but the determined youth...made the
insignificance of the thing forgotten...
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 6.118 16 A farm is a good thing when it begins and
ends with itself...
Wth 6.121 12 Nature has her own best mode of doing each
thing...
Ctr 6.139 27 A great part of courage is the courage of
having done the
thing before.
Ctr 6.162 27 If there is any great and good thing in
store for you, it will not
come at the first or the second call...
Bhr 6.180 2 When the eyes say one thing and the tongue
another, a
practised man relies on the language of the first.
Bhr 6.180 9 There is a look by which a man shows he is
going to say a
good thing...
Bhr 6.188 6 In persons of character we do not remark
manners, because of
their instantaneousness. We are surprised by the thing done, out of all
power to watch the way of it.
Wsp 6.210 13 Let a man attain the highest and broadest
culture that any
American has possessed, then let him die by sea-storm...and all America
will acquiesce that the best thing has happened to him;...
Wsp 6.211 6 Kossuth fled hither across the ocean to try
if he could rouse
the New World to a sympathy with European liberty. Ay, says New York,
he made a handsome thing of it...
Wsp 6.237 1 Mira came to ask what she should do with
the poor Genesee
woman who had hired herself to work for her...and, now sickening, was
like
to be bedridden on her hands. Should she keep her, or should she
dismiss
her? But Benedict said, why ask? One thing will clear itself as the
thing to
be done...
Wsp 6.237 2 Mira came to ask what she should do with
the poor Genesee
woman who had hired herself to work for her...and, now sickening, was
like
to be bedridden on her hands. Should she keep her, or should she
dismiss
her? But Benedict said, why ask? One thing will clear itself as the
thing to
be done...
Wsp 6.239 7 'T is a higher thing to confide that if it
is best we should live, we shall live...
CbW 6.248 23 Franklin said, Mankind...begin upon a
thing, but, meeting
with a difficulty, they fly from it discouraged;...
CbW 6.257 27 The right partisan is a heady, narrow man,
who, because he
does not see many things, sees some one thing with heat and
exaggeration...
Bty 6.299 10 The man is physically as well as
metaphysically a thing of
shreds and patches...
Bty 6.303 17 The new virtue which constitutes a thing
beautiful is a certain
cosmical quality...
Bty 6.304 7 The feat of the imagination is in showing
the convertibility of
every thing into every other thing.
Bty 6.304 8 The feat of the imagination is in showing
the convertibility of
every thing into every other thing.
Bty 6.305 2 ...whatsoever thing does not express to me
the sea and sky...is
somewhat forbidden and wrong.
Ill 6.310 9 ...the best thing which the [Mammoth] cave
had to offer was an
illusion.
Ill 6.325 20 The mad crowd drives hither and thither,
now furiously
commanding this thing to be done, now that.
SS 7.4 11 When [my new friend] bought a house, the
first thing he did was
to plant trees.
SS 7.5 22 [My friend] admired in Newton not so much his
theory of the
moon as his letter to Collins, in which he forbade him to insert his
name
with the solution of the problem in the Philosophical Transactions: It
would
perhaps increase my acquaintance, the thing which I chiefly study to
decline.
Civ 7.30 7 A puny creature, walled in on every side, as
Daniel wrote,-- Unless above himself he can/ Erect himself, how poor a
thing is man!/...
Art2 7.39 17 [Art] was defined by Aristotle, The reason
of the thing, without the matter.
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 7.77 24 A greater power of carrying the thing
loftily and with perfect
assurance, would confound merchant, banker, judge...
Elo1 7.88 10 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 7.89 13 The orator possesses no information which
his hearers have
not, yet he teaches them to see the thing with his eyes.
DL 7.109 18 I am not one thing and my expenditure
another.
DL 7.112 8 ...if you look at the multitude of
particulars, one would say: Good housekeeping is impossible; order is
too precious a thing to dwell
with men and women.
DL 7.124 27 We...are still villagers, who think that
every thing in their
petty town is a little superior to the same thing anywhere else.
DL 7.125 1 We...are still villagers, who think that
every thing in their petty
town is a little superior to the same thing anywhere else.
Boks 7.195 4 [Nature] does the same thing by books as
by her gases and
plants.
Boks 7.196 20 If you should transfer the amount of your
reading day by
day from the newspaper to the standard authors----But who dare speak of
such a thing?
Clbs 7.227 3 ...one thing is certain,--at some rate,
intercourse we must have.
Clbs 7.228 5 Every time we say a thing in conversation,
we get a
mechanical advantage in detaching it well and deliverly.
Clbs 7.230 14 ...a natural fact has only half its value
until a fact in moral
nature, its counterpart, is stated. Then they confirm and adorn each
other; a
story is matched by another story. And that may be the reason why, when
a
gentleman has told a good thing, he immediately tells it again.
Clbs 7.238 19 The same thing took place when Leibnitz
came to visit
Newton; when Schiller came to Goethe;...
Clbs 7.248 25 ...it was when things went prosperously,
and the company
was full of honor, at the banquet of the Cid, that the guests
all...agreed in
one thing,--that they had not eaten better for three years.
Suc 7.281 1 One thing is forever good;/ That one thing
is Success,--/ Dear
to the Eumenides,/ And to all the heavenly brood./
Suc 7.281 2 One thing is forever good;/ That one thing
is Success,--/ Dear
to the Eumenides,/ And to all the heavenly brood./
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 8.17 5 Poetry is the perpetual endeavor to express
the spirit of the thing...
PI 8.17 22 A deep insight will always, like Nature,
ultimate its thought in a
thing.
PI 8.22 11 Charles James Fox thought Poetry the great
refreshment of the
human mind,--the only thing, after all;...
PI 8.23 16 We are advertised...that every thing is
convertible into every
other.
PI 8.23 19 Whatever one act we do, whatever one thing
we learn, we are
doing and learning all things...
PI 8.56 13 Gray avows that he thinks even a bad verse
as good a thing or
better than the best observation that was ever made on it.
PI 8.72 24 Turnpike is one thing and blue sky another.
SA 8.103 12 ...[the American to be proud of] was the
best talker...in the
company: what...with an eye always to the working of the thing...
SA 8.105 13 Now society in towns is infested by persons
who, seeing that
the sentiments please, counterfeit the expression of them. These we
call
sentimentalists,--Talkers who mistake the description for the thing...
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 8.127 1 If [some men] are to put a thing in proper
shape...their mind is
a blank.
Elo2 8.129 27 ...the essential thing [in eloquence] is
heat...
Res 8.147 6 ...it is the principal thing you are to beg
at the hands of
Almighty God, to preserve your understanding entire;...
Res 8.149 13 We have not a toy or trinket for idle
amusement but
somewhere it is the one thing needful...
Res 8.151 7 [Taste] should be extended to gardens and
grounds, and mainly
one thing should be illustrated: that life in the country wants all
things on a
low tone...
Comc 8.156 1 And if I laugh at any mortal thing/ 't is
that I may not weep./ Byron.
Comc 8.164 19 ...the religious sentiment is the most
real and earnest thing
in nature...
Comc 8.164 27 ...the inertia of men inclines them, when
the [religious] sentiment sleeps, to imitate that thing it did;...
Comc 8.171 5 ...among the women in the street, you
shall see one whose
bonnet and dress are one thing, and the lady herself quite another...
QO 8.192 6 Wordsworth, as soon as he heard a good
thing, caught it up...
QO 8.195 10 A man hears a fine sentence out of
Swedenborg...and is very
merry at heart that he has now got so fine a thing.
QO 8.197 12 ...Mr. Hallam is reported as mentioning at
dinner one of his
friends who had said, I don't know how it is, a thing that falls flat
from me
seems quite an excellent joke when given at second hand by Sheridan.
QO 8.199 20 ...does it not look...as if we stood...in a
circle of intelligences
that reached...back to the first negro, who...gave a shriller sound or
name
for the thing he saw and dealt with?
Insp 8.269 4 ...the one thing we wish to know is, where
power is to be
bought.
Grts 8.308 26 ...I think it an essential caution to
young writers, that they
shall not in their discourse leave out the one thing which the
discourse was
written to say. Let that belief which you hold alone, have free course.
Imtl 8.340 22 Lord Bacon said: Some of the
philosophers...came to this
point, that whatsoever motions the spirit of man could act and perform
without the organs of the body, might remain after death; which were
only
those of the understanding, and not of the affections; so immortal and
incorruptible a thing did knowledge seem to them to be.
Imtl 8.351 2 Yama said [to Nachiketas], One thing is
good, another is
pleasant.
Dem1 10.18 9 ...[the demonaical property]...forms in
the moral world...a
transverse element, so that the former may be called the warp, the
latter the
woof. For the phenomena which hence originate there are countless
names, since all philosophies and religions have attempted...to settle
the thing once
for all...
Dem1 10.24 27 Men...who had thought it the most natural
thing in the
world that they should exist in this orderly and replenished world,
have
been unable to suppress their amazement at the disclosures of the
somnambulist.
Dem1 10.25 10 [Animal Magnetism] becomes...a black art.
The uses of the
thing, the commodity, the power, at once come to mind...
Aris 10.30 6 Than cometh our very gentillesse of
grace,/ It was no thing
bequethed us with our place./ Chaucer, The Knighte's Tale.
Aris 10.36 13 Every mark and scutcheon of [Nature's]
indicates
constitutional qualities. In science, in trade...it is the same thing.
Aris 10.50 20 It is curious how negligent the public is
of the essential
qualifications of its representatives. They ask if a man is a
Republican, a
Democrat? Yes. Is he a man of talent? Yes. Is he honest and not looking
for
an office or any manner of bribe? He is honest. Well then choose him by
acclamation. And they go home and tell their wives with great
satisfaction
what a good thing they have done.
PerF 10.86 13 One thing is plain; a certain personal
virtue is essential to
freedom;...
Chr2 10.95 2 High instincts, before which our mortal
nature/ Doth tremble
like a guilty thing surprised,-/...
Chr2 10.106 24 Calvinism was one and the same thing in
Geneva, in
Scotland, in Old and New England.
Edc1 10.128 13 Here [in the household] is the sincere
thing, the wondrous
composition for which day and night go round.
Edc1 10.135 15 A man is a little thing whilst he works
by and for himself...
Edc1 10.156 21 See what [your pupils] need, and that
the right thing is
done.
Edc1 10.157 24 Set this law up, whatever becomes of the
rules of the
school: [the pupils] must not whisper, much less talk; but if one of
the
young people says a wise thing, greet it...
MoL 10.246 21 A shrewd broker out of State Street
visited a quiet
countryman possessed of all the virtues, and...said, With your
character
now I could raise all this money at once, and make an excellent thing
of it.
MoL 10.250 9 [Nature says to the American] One thing
you have rightly
done. You have offered a patch of land in the wilderness to every son
of
Adam who will till it.
Schr 10.274 16 One thing is for [the thoughtful man]
settled, that he is to
come at his ends.
Schr 10.275 6 ...Algernon Sidney wrote to his
father...I have ever had in
my mind that when God should cast me into such a condition as that I
cannot save my life but by doing an indecent thing he shows me the time
has come when I should resign it.
Schr 10.285 6 [Men of talent]...noisily persuade
society that this thing
which they do is the needful cause of all men.
LLNE 10.352 10 [Fourier] treats man as a plastic
thing...
LLNE 10.357 8 [Thoreau said] I love best to have each
thing in its season
only...
EzRy 10.385 25 [Ezra Ripley] looked at every person and
thing from the
parochial point of view.
EzRy 10.388 9 Right manly [Ezra Ripley] was, and the
manly thing he
could always say.
EzRy 10.389 27 ...[Ezra Ripley] repeated to me at table
some of the
particulars of that gentleman's [Jack Downing's] intimacy with General
Jackson, in a manner which betrayed to me at once that he took the
whole
for fact. To undeceive him, I hastened to recall some particulars to
show the
absurdity of the thing...
MMEm 10.407 1 I was disappointed, [Mary Moody Emerson]
writes, in
finding my little Calvinist...a cold little thing who lives in society
alone...
MMEm 10.428 11 Constantly offer myself [Mary Moody
Emerson] to
continue the obscurest and loneliest thing ever heard of, with one
proviso,- [God's] agency.
Thor 10.479 22 To [Thoreau] there was no such thing as
size.
Carl 10.491 23 [Young men] wish freedom of the press,
and [Carlyle] thinks the first thing he would do, if he got into
Parliament, would be to
turn out the reporters...
Carl 10.496 22 ...the new French revolution of 1848 was
the best thing [Carlyle] had seen...
Carl 10.497 27 This aplomb [of Carlyle] cannot be
mimicked; it is the
speaking to the heart of the thing.
GSt 10.499 3 Who, when great trials come,/ Nor seeks
nor shunnes them; but doth calmly stay/ Till he the thing and the
example weigh:/ All being
brought into a summe/ What place or person calls for he doth pay./
George
Herbert.
LS 11.12 5 That rite [washing of the feet] is used...by
the Sandemanians. It
has been very properly dropped by other Christians. Why? For two
reasons...(2) because it was typical, and all understood that humility
is the
thing signified.
LS 11.19 11 To eat bread is one thing; to love the
precepts of Christ and
resolve to obey them is quite another.
War 11.171 20 The attractiveness of war shows one thing
through all the
throats of artillery...
FSLC 11.205 19 The union of this people is a real
thing...
FSLC 11.206 13 ...one thing appears certain to me, as
soon as the
constitution ordains an immoral law, it ordains disunion.
FSLC 11.210 22 ......still the question recurs, What
must we do [about
slavery]? One thing is plain, we cannot answer for the Union, but we
must
keep Massachusetts true.
FSLN 11.217 7 The one thing not to be forgiven to
intellectual persons is, not to know their own task...
FSLN 11.232 24 The events of this month are teaching
one thing plain and
clear, the worthlessness of good tools to bad workmen;...
AsSu 11.248 2 Many years ago, when Mr. Webster was
challenged in
Washington to a duel by one of these [Southern] madcaps, his friends
came
forward with prompt good sense and said such a thing was not to be
thought
of;...
AKan 11.259 26 Manifest Destiny, Democracy, Freedom,
fine names for
an ugly thing.
AKan 11.260 17 ...can any citizen of the Southern
country who happens to
think kidnapping a bad thing, say so?
JBB 11.270 25 ...[John Brown] said he did not believe
in moral suasion, he
believed in putting the thing through.
TPar 11.291 26 ...every sound heart loves a responsible
person, one who... says one thing...always because he must...
EPro 11.324 17 This is an odd thing for an Englishman,
a Frenchman, or
an Austrian to say, who remembers Europe of the last seventy years...
HCom 11.343 2 [Our young men] said, It is not in me to
resist. I go [to
war] because I must. It is a duty which I shall never forgive myself if
I
decline. ... Only one thing is certain, I can well die but i cannot
afford to
misbehave.
SMC 11.348 20 ...manhood is the one immortal thing/
Beneath Time's
changeful sky/...
Wom 11.413 23 The first thing men think of, when they
love, is to exhibit
their usefulness and advantages to the object of their affection.
CPL 11.505 10 A man, that strives to make himself a
different thing from
other men by much reading gains this chiefest good, that in all
fortunes he
hath something to entertain and comfort himself withal.
PLT 12.14 10 ...this watching of the mind...to see the
mechanics of the
thing, is a little of the detective.
PLT 12.25 10 The fine tree continues to grow. The same
thing happens in
the man.
PLT 12.31 1 The one thing not to be forgiven to
intellectual persons is that
they believe in the ideas of others.
PLT 12.40 12 Insight assimilates the thing seen.
PLT 12.41 4 ...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 12.44 24 For weal or woe we clear ourselves from
the thing we
contemplate.
PLT 12.46 3 Wishing is one thing; will another.
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 19 The grasp is the main thing.
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 12.51 10 It is a law of Nature that he who looks at
one thing must turn
his eyes from every other thing in the universe.
PLT 12.51 11 It is a law of Nature that he who looks at
one thing must turn
his eyes from every other thing in the universe.
PLT 12.51 15 ...in learning one thing well you learn
all things.
PLT 12.52 9 ...because [men] know one thing, we defer
to them in another...
PLT 12.55 26 The right partisan is a heady man,
who...sees some one thing
with heat and exaggeration;...
PLT 12.58 13 Present power...requires concentration on
the moment and
the thing to be done.
Mem 12.107 22 ...what we wish to keep, we must once
thoroughly possess. Then the thing seen will no longer be what it
was...but a reminder of its
law...
CInt 12.117 12 Few men wish to know how the thing
really stands...
CL 12.163 15 One thing, the lover of Nature cannot tell
the best thing he
knows.
CL 12.163 16 ...the lover of Nature cannot tell the
best thing he knows.
Milt1 12.250 25 ...when [Milton] comes to speak of the
reason of the thing [Defence of the English People], then he always
recovers himself.
ACri 12.293 2 Vulgarisms to be gazetted...as a general
thing;...
ACri 12.297 22 Carlyle, with his inimitable ways of
saying the thing, is
next best to the inventor of the thing...
ACri 12.297 23 Carlyle, with his inimitable ways of
saying the thing, is
next best to the inventor of the thing...
MLit 12.320 7 ...the reason why [the true poet] can say
one thing well is
because his vision extends to the sight of all things...
MLit 12.323 16 To read [Goethe's] record is a frugality
of time, for you
shall find no word that does not stand for a thing...
MLit 12.324 11 ...[Goethe]...pierced the purpose of a
thing and studied to
reconcile that purpose with his own being.
MLit 12.327 27 Here was a man [Goethe] who, in the
feeling that the thing
itself was so admirable as to leave all comment behind, went up and
down, from object to object, lifting the veil from every one, and did
no more.
WSL 12.347 23 [Landor] hates false words, and seeks
with care, difficulty
and moroseness those that fit the thing.
AgMs 12.360 12 ...every man has one thing which he
specially wishes to
say...
Let 12.395 19 We do a great many selfish things every
day; among them all
let us do one thing of enlightened selfishness.
Let 12.395 24 But to be prudent in all the particulars
of life, and in this one
thing alone religiously forbearing;...and only abstinent when it is
proposed
to provide ourselves with guides, examples, lovers!
Let 12.397 7 One thing is plain, that discontent and
the luxury of tears will
bring nothing to pass.
Trag 12.407 23 ...universally, in uneducated and
unreflecting persons...we
discover traits of the same superstition [belief in Fate]...a several
penalty, nowise grounded in the nature of the thing, but on an
arbitrary will.
Thing, n. (1)
ET8 5.137 15 ...[the English] administer, in different
parts of the world, the
codes of every empire and race;...in the Isle of Man, of the
Scandinavian
Thing;...
things, n. (894)
Nat 1.3 23 ...whatever curiosity the order of things has
awakened in our
minds, the order of things can satisfy.
Nat 1.4 1 ...whatever curiosity the order of things has
awakened in our
minds, the order of things can satisfy.
Nat 1.5 11 Art is applied to the mixture of [man's]
will with the same
things [unchanged essences]...
Nat 1.15 4 Such is the constitution of all
things...that the primary forms... give us delight in and for
themselves;...
Nat 1.20 11 All those things for which men plough,
build, or sail, obey
virtue;...
Nat 1.22 10 ...whosoever has seen a person of...happy
genius, will have
remarked how easily he took all things along with him...
Nat 1.22 16 Beside the relation of things to virtue,
they have a relation to
thought.
Nat 1.22 18 The intellect searches out the absolute
order of things...
Nat 1.25 22 ...thought and emotion are words borrowed
from sensible
things...
Nat 1.26 6 Children and savages use only nouns or names
of things...
Nat 1.26 13 ...it is things which are emblematic.
Nat 1.27 1 Who looks upon a river in a meditative hour
and is not reminded
of the flux of all things?
Nat 1.29 4 Because of this radical correspondence
between visible things
and human thoughts, savages...converse in figures.
Nat 1.30 9 When...duplicity and falsehood take place of
simplicity and
truth...old words are perverted to stand for things which are not;...
Nat 1.30 22 ...wise men...fasten words again to visible
things;...
Nat 1.34 7 Can such things be,/ And overcome us like a
summer's cloud,/ Without our special wonder?/
Nat 1.38 10 Therefore is Space, and therefore Time,
that man may know
that things are not huddled and lumped...
Nat 1.40 13 [Man's] victorious thought comes up with
and reduces all
things...
Nat 1.40 18 All things are moral;...
Nat 1.42 3 All things with which we deal, preach to us.
Nat 1.43 5 All the endless variety of things make an
identical impression.
Nat 1.43 8 Xenophanes complained...that...all things
hastened back to
Unity.
Nat 1.43 16 Not only resemblances exist in things whose
analogy is
obvious...but also in objects wherein there is great superficial
unlikeness.
Nat 1.45 22 ...the eye...is always accompanied by these
forms, male and
female; and these are incomparably the richest informations of the
power
and order that lie at the heart of things.
Nat 1.49 17 [To the senses] Things are ultimates...
Nat 1.52 5 The sensual man conforms thoughts to
things;...
Nat 1.52 6 ...the poet conforms things to his thoughts.
Nat 1.52 20 The remotest spaces of nature are visited
[by Shakspeare's
muse], and the farthest sundered things are brought together...
Nat 1.52 23 We are made aware that magnitude of
material things is
relative...
Nat 1.55 6 ...the philosopher...postpones the apparent
order and relations of
things to the empire of thought.
Nat 1.58 8 ...The things that are seen, are
temporal;...
Nat 1.58 9 ...the things that are unseen, are eternal.
Nat 1.60 5 [Idealism] beholds the whole circle of
persons and things...
Nat 1.61 11 ...to the suburbs and outskirts of things,
[nature] is faithful to
the cause whence it had its origin.
Nat 1.62 25 ...the mind is a part of the nature of
things;...
Nat 1.63 26 ...the dread universal essence...is that
for which all things
exist...
Nat 1.66 2 In inquiries respecting...the frame of
things, the highest reason is
always the truest.
Nat 1.67 9 It is not so pertinent to man to know all
the individuals of the
animal kingdom, as it is to know whence and whereto is this tyrannizing
unity in his constitution, which evermore separates and classifies
things...
Nat 1.67 17 I cannot greatly honor minuteness in
details, so long as there is
no hint to explain the relation between things and thoughts;...
Nat 1.69 13 All things unto our flesh are kind/...
Nat 1.73 26 The axis of vision is not coincident with
the axis of things...
Nat 1.75 3 To our blindness, these [common] things seem
unaffecting.
Nat 1.75 14 Learn that none of these [common] things is
superficial...
Nat 1.76 20 A correspondent revolution in things will
attend the influx of
the spirit.
AmS 1.83 20 Man is thus metamorphosed...into many
things.
AmS 1.84 15 ...do not all things exist for the
student's behoof?
AmS 1.84 17 ...All things have two handles: beware of
the wrong one.
AmS 1.85 18 ...[the young mind] finds how to join two
things and see in
them one nature;...
AmS 1.85 21 ...tyrannized over by its own unifying
instinct, [the young
mind] goes on tying things together...
AmS 1.85 23 ...[the young mind] goes on...discovering
roots running under
ground whereby contrary and remote things cohere and flower out from
one
stem.
AmS 1.89 24 Books are the best of things, well used;...
AmS 1.112 11 Man is surprised to find that things near
are not less
beautiful and wondrous than things remote.
AmS 1.112 12 Man is surprised to find that things near
are not less
beautiful and wondrous than things remote.
AmS 1.113 10 ...[Swedenborg]...has given in epical
parables a theory...of
unclean and fearful things.
DSA 1.120 9 ...when the mind...reveals the laws which
traverse the
universe and make things what they are, then shrinks the great
world...into
a mere illustration...
DSA 1.123 14 Speak the truth, and all things alive or
brute are vouchers...
DSA 1.124 3 ...whatever opposes that will is everywhere
balked and
baffled, because things are made so...
DSA 1.124 9 ...all things proceed out of this same
spirit...
DSA 1.124 13 All things proceed out of the same
spirit...
DSA 1.124 14 All things proceed out of the same spirit,
and all things
conspire with it.
DSA 1.125 5 Thought may work cold and intransitive in
things, and find no
end or unity;...
DSA 1.127 10 Let this faith depart, and...the things it
made become false...
DSA 1.143 20 ...what greater calamity can fall upon a
nation than the loss
of worship? Then all things go to decay.
DSA 1.144 8 When a man comes, all books are legible,
all things
transparent...
DSA 1.149 22 Let us thank God that such things
[virtuous acts] exist.
LE 1.157 23 ...when [the scholar] comprehends his
duties he...converses
with things.
LE 1.158 18 When [the scholar] has seen that [the
intellectual power]...is
the soul which made the world...he will know that he...may rightfully
hold
all things subordinate and answerable to it.
LE 1.158 20 A divine pilgrim in nature, all things
attend [the scholar's] steps.
LE 1.160 9 ...we will put our own interpretation on
things, and our own
things for interpretation.
LE 1.160 11 ...things must take my scale...
LE 1.167 19 By Latin and English poetry we were born
and bred in an
oratorio of praises of nature...yet the naturalist of this hour finds
that he
knows nothing, by all their poems, of any of these fine things;...
LE 1.172 4 A profound thought, anywhere, classifies all
things...
LE 1.173 8 Thus is justice done to each generation and
individual,- wisdom teaching man...that he shall not bewail himself, as
if...he was born
into the dotage of things;...
LE 1.173 18 ...[the scholar] must possess [the world]
by putting himself
into harmony with the constitution of things.
LE 1.181 2 [The scholar] is a revealer of things.
LE 1.181 3 [The scholar] is a revealer of things. Let
him first learn the
things.
LE 1.183 23 Hence the temptation to the scholar...to
hear the question...to
make an answer of words in lack of the oracle of things.
MN 1.194 21 I cannot,-nor can any man,-speak precisely
of things so
sublime...
MN 1.195 8 In the bottom of the heart it is said; I am,
and by me, O child! this fair body and world of thine stands and grows.
I am: all things are
mine: and all mine are thine.
MN 1.196 5 Here comes by a great inquisitor with auger
and plumb-line, and will...pierce to the core of things.
MN 1.205 20 The great Pan of old, who was clothed in a
leopard skin to
signify the beautiful variety of things...was but the representative of
thee, O
rich and various Man!...
MN 1.206 7 [Every child]...is a demon or god thrown
into a particular
chaos, where he strives ever to lead things from disorder into order.
MN 1.208 4 [A man] need not study where to stand, nor
to put things in
favorable lights;...
MN 1.208 5 ...from [a man] all things are illuminated
to their centre.
MN 1.210 2 ...if [a man's] eye is set on the things to
be done...then the
voice grows faint...
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...
MN 1.211 21 [This ecstatic state] respects...the
anticipation of all things by
the intellect...
MN 1.212 9 There is something social and intrusive in
the nature of all
things;...
MN 1.213 4 These beautiful basilisks [the stars] set
their brute glorious
eyes on the eye of every child, and, if they can, cause their nature to
pass
through his wondering eyes into him, and so all things are mixed.
MN 1.214 1 Things divine are not attainable by mortals
who understand
sensual things...
MN 1.214 3 Things divine are not attainable by mortals
who understand
sensual things...
MN 1.214 26 The reforms whose fame now fills the
land...are poor bitter
things when prosecuted for themselves as an end.
MN 1.218 2 ...what is Genius but finer love...a love of
the flower and
perfection of things...
MN 1.223 7 I praise with wonder this great reality,
which seems to drown
all things in the deluge of its light.
MN 1.223 27 All things are known to the soul.
MR 1.228 22 ...now...all things else hear the trumpet,
and must rush to
judgment...
MR 1.238 13 ...whoever takes any of these things
[species of property] into
his possession, takes the charge of defending them from this troop of
enemies...
MR 1.239 3 ...when [a man] comes to give all the goods
he has year after
year collected, in one estate to his son...the son finds his hands
full,-not to
use these things, but to look after them...
MR 1.242 21 ...if a man find in himself any strong bias
to poetry, to art... drawing him to these things with a devotion
incompatible with good
husbandry, that man...ought to ransom himself from the duties of
economy
by a certain rigor and privation in his habits.
MR 1.243 27 I ought to be armed by every part and
function of my
household...by my traffic. Yet I am almost no party to any of these
things.
MR 1.244 4 We spend our incomes...for a hundred
trifles...and not for the
things of a man.
MR 1.247 10 I do not wish to push my criticism on the
state of things
around me to that extravagant mark that shall compel me to suicide...
MR 1.256 18 The opening of the spiritual senses
disposes men ever...to
cast all things behind...
LT 1.261 14 The reason and influence of wealth...the
tendencies which
have acquired the name of Transcendentalism in Old and New England; the
aspect of poetry, as the exponent and interpretation of these
things;...these
and other related topics will in turn come to be considered.
LT 1.264 22 ...that only is real which men love and
rejoice in;...what they
embrace and avow, and not the things which chill, benumb, and terrify
them.
LT 1.268 2 Let us not see the foundations...of a new
and better order of
things laid, with...an attention preoccupied with trifles.
LT 1.279 6 ...all things...are phantasms...beside the
sanctuary of the heart.
LT 1.290 19 You will absolve me from the charge
of...the desire to say
smart things at the expense of whomsoever, when you see that reality is
all
we prize...
Con 1.297 11 ...[Saturn] feared again; and nature
froze, the things that were
made went backward...
Con 1.298 2 The castle which conservatism is set to
defend is the actual
state of things, good and bad.
Con 1.298 4 The project of innovation is the best
possible state of things.
Con 1.298 18 ...[conservatism] goes to make an adroit
member of the social
frame, [liberalism] to postpone all things to the man himself;...
Con 1.302 23 Wisdom does not seek a literal rectitude,
but...such a one as
the faculties of man and the constitution of things will warrant.
Con 1.305 8 ...you are under the necessity of using the
Actual order of
things, in order to disuse it;...
Con 1.306 11 There [the youth] stands...with all the
reason of things, one
would say, on his side.
Con 1.313 4 Who put things on this false basis?
Con 1.313 8 The order of things is as good as the
character of the
population permits.
Con 1.324 25 I am primarily engaged to myself...to
demonstrate to all men
that there is intelligence and good will at the heart of things...
Con 1.326 13 It is much that this old and vituperated
system of things has
borne so fair a child.
Tran 1.329 20 ...The senses give us representations of
things, but what are
the things themselves, they cannot tell.
Tran 1.330 9 [The idealist]...asks the materialist for
his grounds of
assurance that things are as his senses represent them.
Tran 1.330 25 [The idealist] does not deny the presence
of this table, this
chair...but he looks at these things as the reverse side of the
tapestry...
Tran 1.331 1 This [idealistic] manner of looking at
things transfers every
object in nature from an independent and anomalous position without
there, into the consciousness.
Tran 1.333 8 The idealist has another measure...namely,
the rank which
things themselves take in his consciousness;...
Tran 1.334 7 [The idealist's] experience inclines him
to behold the
procession of facts you call the world, as flowing perpetually outward
from
an invisible, unsounded centre in himself...and necessitating him to
regard
all things as having a subjective or relative existence...
Tran 1.334 11 From...this beholding of all things in
the mind, follow easily [the idealist's] whole ethics.
Tran 1.334 25 ...let the soul be erect, and all things
will go well.
Tran 1.349 12 You make very free use of these words
great and holy, but
few things appear to [Transcendentalists] such.
Tran 1.359 2 Amidst the downward tendency and proneness
of things...will
you not tolerate one or two solitary voices in the land, speaking for
thoughts and principles not marketable or perishable?
YA 1.363 4 ...our people have their intellectual
culture from one country
and their duties from another. This false state of things is newly in a
way to
be corrected.
YA 1.366 4 The land...is to...bring us into just
relations with men and
things.
YA 1.372 3 ...love and good are inevitable, and in the
course of things.
YA 1.377 11 ...as quickly as men go to foreign parts in
ships or caravans, a
new order of things springs up;...
YA 1.379 11 Every line of history inspires a
confidence...that things mend. .
YA 1.379 21 New thoughts, new things.
YA 1.385 12 There really seems a progress towards such
a state of things in
which this work shall be done by these natural workmen;...
YA 1.386 11 How can our young men complain of the
poverty of things in
New England...
Hist 2.1 3 There is no great and no small/ To the Soul
that maketh all:/ And
where it cometh, all things, are;/ And it cometh everywhere./
Hist 2.5 25 It is the universal nature which gives
worth to particular men
and things.
Hist 2.10 13 Ferguson discovered many things in
astronomy which had
long been known. The better for him.
Hist 2.12 20 ...to the saint, all things are friendly
and sacred...
Hist 2.13 9 Genius...far back in the womb of things
sees the rays parting
from one orb, that diverge...by infinite diameters.
Hist 2.13 24 Through the bruteness and toughness of
matter, a subtle spirit
bends all things to its own will.
Hist 2.14 13 There is, at the surface [of history],
infinite variety of things;...
Hist 2.17 20 ...the roots of all things are in man.
Hist 2.18 9 The trivial experience of every day is
always...converting into
things the words and signs which we had heard and seen without heed.
Hist 2.26 4 Such things [vases, tragedies, statues]
have continued to be
made in all ages...
Hist 2.30 24 [Prometheus] stands between the unjust
justice of the Eternal
Father and the race of mortals, and readily suffers all things on their
account.
Hist 2.34 9 ...Plato said that poets utter great and
wise things which they do
not themselves understand.
Hist 2.34 23 The preternatural prowess of the hero, the
gift of perpetual
youth, and the like, are alike the endeavor of the human spirit to bend
the
shows of things to the desires of the mind.
SR 2.60 26 ...a true man...is the centre of things.
SR 2.61 24 Let a man then...keep things under his feet.
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 16 The joyful loyalty with which men have
everywhere suffered
the king...to...make his own scale of men and things...was the
hieroglyphic
by which they obscurely signified...the right of every man.
SR 2.64 10 In that deep force...all things find their
common origin.
SR 2.64 13 ...the sense of being which in calm hours
rises...in the soul, is
not diverse from things...
SR 2.64 17 We first share the life by which things
exist...
SR 2.65 8 [Man] may err in the expression of [his
involuntary perceptions], but he knows that these things are so...
SR 2.66 1 It must be that when God speaketh he should
communicate, not
one thing, but all things;...
SR 2.66 6 Whenever a mind is simple and receives a
divine wisdom, old
things pass away...
SR 2.66 8 All things are made sacred by relation to
[divine wisdom]...
SR 2.66 10 All things are dissolved to their centre by
their cause...
SR 2.69 8 The soul raised over passion...calms itself
with knowing that all
things go well.
SR 2.70 17 All things real are so by so much virtue as
they contain.
SR 2.81 19 He who travels...to get somewhat which he
does not carry... grows old even in youth among old things.
SR 2.87 21 Men have looked away from themselves and at
things so long
that they have come to esteem the religious, learned and civil
institutions as
guards of property...
Comp 2.97 10 The entire system of things gets
represented in every particle.
Comp 2.99 11 The farmer imagines power and place are
fine things.
Comp 2.100 7 Things refuse to be mismanaged long.
Comp 2.102 5 All things are moral.
Comp 2.104 7 The soul says, Have dominion over all
things to the ends of
virtue;...
Comp 2.104 8 ...the body would have the power over
things to its own ends.
Comp 2.104 11 The soul strives amain to live and work
through all things.
Comp 2.104 12 [The soul] would be the only fact. All
things shall be added
unto it...
Comp 2.104 27 Pleasure is taken out of pleasant
things...as soon as we seek
to separate them from the whole.
Comp 2.105 1 Pleasure is taken out of pleasant things,
profit out of
profitable things...as soon as we seek to separate them from the whole.
Comp 2.105 1 Pleasure is taken out of pleasant
things...power out of strong
things, as soon as we seek to separate them from the whole.
Comp 2.105 3 We can no more halve things and get the
sensual good, by
itself, than we can get an inside that shall have no outside...
Comp 2.107 15 ...in nature nothing can be given, all
things are sold.
Comp 2.109 13 All things are double, one against
another.
Comp 2.111 2 The senses would make things of all
persons;...
Comp 2.114 13 ...because of the dual constitution of
things, in labor as in
life there can be no cheating.
Comp 2.115 25 The league between virtue and nature
engages all things to
assume a hostile front to vice.
Comp 2.116 1 [The traitor] finds that things are
arranged for truth and
benefit...
Comp 2.119 4 The nature and soul of things takes on
itself the guaranty of
the fulfilment of every contract...
Comp 2.120 12 Thus do all things preach the
indifferency of circumstances.
Comp 2.124 13 It is the nature of the soul to
appropriate all things.
Comp 2.124 23 Every soul is by this intrinsic necessity
quitting its whole
system of things...
SL 2.131 5 Behind us, as we go, all things assume
pleasing forms...
SL 2.131 6 Not only things familiar and stale...are
comely as they take their
place in the pictures of memory.
SL 2.134 1 When we see a soul whose acts are all regal,
graceful and
pleasant as roses, we must thank God that such things can be and are...
SL 2.135 27 We must needs intermeddle and have things
in our own way...
SL 2.136 24 If we look wider, things are all alike;...
SL 2.139 10 The whole course of things goes to teach us
faith.
SL 2.143 14 The parts of hospitality...and a thousand
other things, royalty
makes its own estimate of, and a royal mind will.
SL 2.145 5 Over all things that are agreeable to his
nature and genius the
man has the highest right.
SL 2.147 7 Our eyes are holden that we cannot see
things that stare us in
the face...
SL 2.155 20 Truth has not single victories; all things
are its organs...
SL 2.160 7 Virtue is the adherence in action to the
nature of things and the
nature of things makes it prevalent.
Lov1 2.174 25 In looking backward [many men] may find
that several
things which were not the charm have more reality to this groping
memory
than the charm itself which embalmed them.
Lov1 2.175 4 ...no man ever forgot the visitations of
that power to his heart
and brain, which created all things anew;...
Lov1 2.176 16 [Love] makes all things alive and
significant.
Lov1 2.178 22 ...the maiden stands to [the lover] for a
representative of all
select things and virtues.
Lov1 2.179 19 [Beauty's] nature is like opaline
doves'-neck lustres, hovering and evanescent. Herein it resembles the
most excellent things...
Lov1 2.179 23 What else did Jean Paul Richter signify,
when he said to
music, Away! away! thou speakest to me of things which in all my
endless
life I have not found and shall not find.
Lov1 2.181 11 ...[the ancient writers] said that the
soul of man, embodied
here on earth...was soon stupefied by the light of the natural sun, and
unable
to see any other objects than those of this world, which are but
shadows of
real things.
Lov1 2.183 23 The rays of the soul alight first on
things nearest...
Lov1 2.183 27 ...things are ever grouping themselves
according to higher or
more interior laws.
Fdsp 2.189 13 ...O friend, my bosom said,/ .../ All
things through thee take
nobler form/ And look beyond the earth,/...
Fdsp 2.192 12 ...all things fly into their places...
Fdsp 2.196 19 Shall I not be as real as the things I
see?
Fdsp 2.210 6 Why be visited by [your friend] at your
own [house]? Are
these things material to our covenant?
Fdsp 2.216 26 ...these things may hardly be said
without a sort of treachery
to the relation [of friendship].
Prd1 2.226 23 We are instructed by these petty
experiences which usurp
the hours and years. ... Such is the value of these matters that a man
who
knows other things can never know too much of these.
Prd1 2.231 6 Poetry and prudence should be coincident.
... But now the two
things seem irreconcilably parted.
Prd1 2.232 12 He that despiseth small things will
perish by little and little.
Prd1 2.236 22 ...the proper administration of outward
things will always
rest on a just apprehension of their cause and origin;...
Prd1 2.237 10 ...in regard to disagreeable and
formidable things, prudence
does not consist in evasion or in flight, but in courage.
Prd1 2.238 1 In the occurrence of unpleasant things
among neighbors, fear
comes readily to heart and magnifies the consequence of the other
party;...
OS 2.270 26 From within or from behind, a light shines
through us upon
things...
OS 2.272 11 The soul circumscribes all things.
OS 2.273 20 In common speech we refer all things to
time...
OS 2.273 27 ...we say...that a day of certain
political, moral, social reforms
is at hand, and the like, when we mean that in the nature of things one
of
the facts we contemplate is external and fugitive, and the other is
permanent
and connate with the soul.
OS 2.274 2 The things we now esteem fixed
shall...detach themselves like
ripe fruit from our experience...
OS 2.280 13 ...the Maker of all things and all persons
stands behind us...
OS 2.280 15 ...the Maker of all things and all
persons...casts his dread
omniscience through us over things.
OS 2.284 16 No answer in words can reply to a question
of things.
OS 2.285 4 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 2.289 5 ...[Homer, Chaucer, Spenser, Shakspeare,
Milton] are poets by
the free course which they allow to the informing soul, which through
their
eyes beholds again and blesses the things which it hath made.
OS 2.289 19 The inspiration which uttered itself in
Hamlet and Lear could
utter things as good from day to day for ever.
OS 2.291 4 The simplest utterances are worthiest to be
written, yet are they
so cheap and so things of course, that in the infinite riches of the
soul it is
like gathering a few pebbles off the ground...
OS 2.293 14 The things that are really for thee
gravitate to thee.
OS 2.296 14 [The soul] is not wise, but it sees through
all things.
Cir 2.304 26 The man finishes his story...how it puts a
new face on all
things!
Cir 2.308 20 Beware when the great God lets loose a
thinker on this planet. Then all things are at risk.
Cir 2.309 25 ...all things are shadows of [God].
Cir 2.310 6 The things which are dear to men at this
hour are so on account
of the ideas which have emerged on their mental horizon...
Cir 2.310 10 The things which are dear to men at this
hour are so on
account of the ideas which have emerged on their mental horizon, and
which cause the present order of things...
Cir 2.311 10 We all stand waiting, empty...surrounded
by mighty symbols
which are not symbols to us, but prose and trivial toys. Then cometh
the
god...and by a flash of his eye burns up the veil which shrouded all
things...
Cir 2.313 19 Then shall also the Son be subject unto
Him who put all
things under him...
Cir 2.314 20 Not through subtle subterranean channels
need friend and fact
be drawn to their counterpart, but...these things proceed from the
eternal
generation of the soul.
Cir 2.315 23 Blessed be nothing and The worse things
are, the better they
are are proverbs which express the transcendentalism of common life.
Cir 2.316 7 ...that second man has his own way of
looking at things;...
Cir 2.318 13 I unsettle all things.
Cir 2.318 18 ...this incessant movement and progression
which all things
partake could never become sensible to us but by contrast to some
principle
of fixture or stability in the soul.
Cir 2.319 2 ...all things renew, germinate and spring.
Int 2.325 23 [Mind's] vision is not like the vision of
the eye, but is union
with the things known.
Int 2.326 18 Nature shows all things formed and bound.
Int 2.326 20 The intellect...detects intrinsic likeness
between remote
things...
Int 2.326 21 The intellect...reduces all things into a
few principles.
Int 2.341 21 [The scholar] must worship truth, and
forego all things for
that...
Int 2.344 15 [One soul] must treat things and books and
sovereign genius
as itself also a sovereign.
Int 2.345 2 ...whosoever propounds to you a philosophy
of the mind, is
only a more or less awkward translator of things in your
consciousness...
Int 2.346 20 ...[the Greek philosophers' thought]
commands the entire
schedule and inventory of things for its illustration.
Art1 2.354 13 Until one thing comes out from the
connection of things, there can be enjoyment, contemplation, but no
thought.
Art1 2.354 19 ...[the infant's] individual character
and his practical power
depend on his daily progress in the separation of things...
Art1 2.356 13 ...excellence of all things is one.
Art1 2.362 22 ...when we have said all our fine things
about the arts, we
must end with a frank confession that the arts, as we know them, are
but
initial.
Art1 2.365 4 ...the statue will look cold and false
before that new activity
which needs to roll through all things...
Art1 2.365 5 ...the statue will look cold and false
before that new activity
which...is impatient of...things not alive.
Pt1 3.7 10 ...God has not made some beautiful things...
Pt1 3.13 9 ...let us...observe how nature, by worthier
impulses, has insured
the poet's fidelity to his office of announcement and affirming, namely
by
the beauty of things, which becomes a new and higher beauty when
expressed.
Pt1 3.13 16 Things more excellent than every image,
says Jamblichus, are
expressed through images.
Pt1 3.13 18 Things admit of being used as symbols
because nature is a
symbol...
Pt1 3.16 1 No imitation or playing of these things [of
nature] would content [the coachman or the hunter];...
Pt1 3.17 5 ...we are apprised of the divineness of this
superior use of
things...in this, that there is no fact in nature which does not carry
the whole
sense of nature;...
Pt1 3.17 22 Small and mean things serve as well as
great symbols.
Pt1 3.18 23 ...it is dislocation and detachment from
the life of God that
makes things ugly...
Pt1 3.18 24 ...the poet, who re-attaches things to
nature and the Whole... disposes very easily of the most disagreeable
facts.
Pt1 3.18 25 ...the poet, who re-attaches things to
nature and the Whole,--re-attaching
even artificial things and violation of nature, to nature, by a
deeper insight,--disposes very easily of the most disagreeable facts.
Pt1 3.20 8 ...words and things...are emblems;...
Pt1 3.20 11 ...we sympathize with the symbols, and
being infatuated with
the economical uses of things, we do not know that they are thoughts.
Pt1 3.20 20 ...the poet...shows us all things in their
right series and
procession.
Pt1 3.20 23 ...through that better perception [the
poet] stands one step
nearer to things...
Pt1 3.21 19 ...the poet is the Namer or Language-maker,
naming things
sometimes after their appearance, sometimes after their essence...
Pt1 3.22 17 ...nature does all things by her own
hands...
Pt1 3.22 23 Genius is the activity which repairs the
decays of things...
Pt1 3.24 25 The expression [of the poet's thoughts] is
organic, or the new
type which things themselves take when liberated.
Pt1 3.25 5 Like the metamorphosis of things into higher
organic forms is [the poet's thoughts'] change into melodies.
Pt1 3.26 8 This insight, which expresses itself by what
is called
Imagination, is a very high sort of seeing, which does not come by
study, but...by sharing the path or circuit of things through forms...
Pt1 3.26 10 The path of things is silent.
Pt1 3.26 21 ...beyond the energy of his possessed and
conscious intellect [every intellectual man] is capable of a new
energy...by abandonment to the
nature of things;...
Pt1 3.27 17 ...if in any manner we can stimulate this
instinct...the mind
flows into and through things hardest and highest...
Pt1 3.30 19 ...the metamorphosis once seen, we divine
that it does not stop. I will not now consider how much this makes the
charm of algebra and the
mathematics, which also have their tropes, but it is felt in every
definition; as when Aristotle defines space to be an immovable vessel
in which things
are contained;...
Pt1 3.35 19 I do not know the man in history to whom
things stood so
uniformly for words [as Swedenborg].
Pt1 3.37 12 Time and nature yield us many gifts, but
not yet the timely
man...the reconciler, whom all things await.
Pt1 3.39 15 Most of the things [the poet] says are
conventional, no doubt;...
Pt1 3.39 19 ...by and by [the poet] says something
which is original and
beautiful. That charms him. He would say nothing else but such things.
Pt1 3.39 27 ...as an admirable creative power exists in
these intellections [of the poet], it is of the last importance that
these things get spoken.
Exp 3.45 14 All things swim and glitter.
Exp 3.48 22 An innavigable sea washes with silent waves
between us and
the things we aim at and converse with.
Exp 3.57 27 The plays of children are nonsense, but
very educative
nonsense. So it is with the largest and solemnest things...
Exp 3.59 14 The whole frame of things preaches
indifferency.
Exp 3.64 17 So many things are unsettled which it is of
the first importance
to settle;...
Exp 3.69 22 The persons who compose our
company...design and execute
many things, and somewhat comes of it all, but an unlooked-for result.
Exp 3.69 25 [The individual] designed many things, and
drew in other
persons as coadjutors, quarreled with some or all, blundered much, and
something is done;...
Exp 3.76 5 ...now, the rapaciousness of this new power,
which threatens to
absorb all things, engages us.
Exp 3.78 9 We permit all things to ourselves...
Exp 3.79 25 ...all things sooner or later fall into
place.
Exp 3.81 5 ...we cannot say too little of our
constitutional necessity of
seeing things under private aspects...
Exp 3.85 22 We dress our garden, eat our dinners...and
these things make
no impression...
Chr1 3.90 27 Man...in these examples [of men of
character] appears to
share the life of things...
Chr1 3.96 5 All things exist in the man tinged with the
manners of his soul.
Chr1 3.99 8 That exultation [in events] is only to be
checked by the
foresight of an order of things so excellent as to throw all our
prosperities
into the deepest shade.
Chr1 3.101 5 All things work exactly according to their
quality and
according to their quantity;...
Chr1 3.101 8 All things...attempt nothing they cannot
do, except man only. He has pretension; he wishes and attempts things
beyond his force.
Chr1 3.102 24 ...[the hero] is again on his road,
adding...new claims on
your heart, which will bankrupt you if you have loitered about the old
things...
Chr1 3.109 25 I should think myself very unhappy in my
associates if I
could not credit the best things in history.
Chr1 3.111 20 ...when men shall meet as they ought,
each a benefactor...it
should be a festival of nature which all things announce.
Chr1 3.111 22 ...when men shall meet as they ought,
each a benefactor...it
should be a festival of nature which all things announce. Of such
friendship, love in the sexes is the first symbol, as all other things
are
symbols of love.
Mrs1 3.124 6 In a good lord there must first be a good
animal, at least to
the extent of yielding the incomparable advantage of animal spirits.
The
ruling class must have more, but they must have these, giving in every
company the sense of power, which makes things easy to be done which
daunt the wise.
Mrs1 3.128 24 [The working heroes] are the sowers,
their sons shall be the
reapers, and their sons, in the ordinary course of things, must yield
the
possession of the harvest to new competitors...
Mrs1 3.137 9 In all things I would have the island of a
man inviolate.
Mrs1 3.151 4 ...are there not women...who anoint our
eyes and we see? We
say things we never thought to have said;...
Gts 3.161 3 Next to things of necessity, the rule for a
gift, which one of my
friends prescribed, is that we might convey to some person that which
properly belonged to his character...
Gts 3.163 11 I say to [the donor], How can you give me
this pot of oil or
this flagon of wine when all your oil and wine is mine, which belief of
mine
this gift seems to deny? Hence the fitness of beautiful, not useful
things, for
gifts.
Nat2 3.179 9 ...taking timely warning, and leaving many
things unsaid on
this topic, let us not longer omit our homage to the Efficient
Nature...
Nat2 3.182 10 Things are so strictly related, that
according to the skill of
the eye, from any one object the parts and properties of any other may
be
predicted.
Nat2 3.185 1 Exaggeration is in the course of things.
Nat2 3.186 26 All things betray the same calculated
profusion.
Nat2 3.190 27 ...trade to all the world, country-house
and cottage by the
waterside, all for a little conversation, high, clear and spiritual!
Could it not
be had as well by beggars on the highway? No, all these things came
from
successive efforts of these beggars to remove friction from the wheels
of
life...
Pol1 3.205 2 Things have their laws, as well as men;...
Pol1 3.205 3 ...things refuse to be trifled with.
Pol1 3.211 26 No forms can have any dangerous
importance whilst we are
befriended by the laws of things.
Pol1 3.215 4 If I put myself in the place of my child,
and we stand in one
thought and see that things are thus or thus, that perception is law
for him
and me.
Pol1 3.216 1 That which all things tend to educe;...is
character.
Pol1 3.219 24 We must not imagine that all things are
lapsing into
confusion if every tender protestant be not compelled to bear his part
in
certain social conventions;...
Pol1 3.220 23 There is not, among the most religious
and instructed men of
the most religious and civil nations...a sufficient belief in the unity
of
things...
NR 3.228 13 ...as we grow older we value total powers
and effects, as the
impression, the quality, the spirit of men and things.
NR 3.235 8 ...these abnormal insights of the adepts
ought to be normal, and
things of course.
NR 3.235 9 All things show us that on every side we are
very near to the
best.
NR 3.236 20 ...when each person...would conquer all
things to his poor
crochet, [Nature] raises up against him another person...
NR 3.242 26 It is the secret of the world that all
things subsist and do not
die...
NR 3.243 4 Really, all things and persons are related
to us...
NR 3.243 8 All persons, all things which we have known,
are here present...
NR 3.243 12 ...if we saw all things that really
surround us we should be
imprisoned and unable to move.
NR 3.243 15 ...all things are pervious to [the soul]
and like highways...
NR 3.243 23 Through solidest eternal things the man
finds his road as if
they did not subsist...
NR 3.245 12 ...All things are in contact;...
NER 3.257 11 It was complained that an education to
things was not given.
NER 3.258 23 These things [Latin, Greek, Mathematics]
became
stereotyped as education...
NER 3.261 15 ...society gains nothing whilst a man, not
himself renovated, attempts to renovate things around him;...
NER 3.262 1 All our things are right and wrong
together.
NER 3.264 26 Friendship and association are very fine
things...
NER 3.270 13 We must go up to a higher platform, to
which we are always
invited to ascend; there, the whole aspect of things changes.
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 3.273 8 Berkeley, having listened to the many
lively things [Lord
Bathurst's guests] had to say, begged to be heard in his turn...
NER 3.275 6 [A man] aims at such things as his
neighbors prize...
NER 3.276 7 [A man] is sure that the soul which gives
the lie to all things
will tell none.
UGM 4.6 12 I count him a great man who inhabits a
higher sphere of
thought...he has but to open his eyes to see things in a true light...
UGM 4.8 19 Behmen and Swedenborg saw that things were
representative.
UGM 4.8 20 Men are...representative; first, of things,
and secondly, of
ideas.
UGM 4.10 14 The eye repeats every day the first eulogy
on things,--He
saw that they were good.
UGM 4.11 11 Each material thing...has its translation,
through humanity, into the spiritual and necessary sphere where it
plays a part as indestructible
as any other. And to these, their ends, all things continually ascend.
UGM 4.13 12 Looking where others look, and conversing
with the same
things, we catch the charm which lured them.
UGM 4.13 17 Talk much with any man of vigorous mind,
and we acquire
very fast the habit of looking at things in the same light...
UGM 4.20 10 These [leaders and law-givers]...admit us
to the constitution
of things.
UGM 4.20 19 ...if persons and things are scores of a
celestial music, let us
read off the strains.
UGM 4.24 24 Not one [person] has a misgiving of being
wrong. Was it not
a bright thought that made things cohere with this bitumen, fastest of
cements?
UGM 4.31 9 Men who know the same things are not long
the best company
for each other.
PPh 4.39 11 Out of Plato come all things that are still
written and debated
among men of thought.
PPh 4.39 18 ...every brisk young man who says in
succession fine things to
each reluctant generation...is some reader of Plato...
PPh 4.39 22 ...every brisk young man who says in
succession fine things to
each reluctant generation...is some reader of Plato, translating into
the
vernacular, wittily, his good things.
PPh 4.46 2 As soon as, with culture, things have
cleared up a little...[men
and women] desist from that weak vehemence and explain their meaning in
detail.
PPh 4.47 14 Before Pericles came the Seven Wise
Masters, and we have
the beginnings of geometry, metaphysics and ethics: then the
partialists,-- deducing the origin of things from flux or water, or
from air, or from fire, or from mind.
PPh 4.48 1 We unite all things by perceiving the law
which pervades
them;...
PPh 4.48 6 ...every mental act...recognizes the
difference of things.
PPh 4.50 11 The knowledge that this spirit, which is
essentially one, is in
one's own and in all other bodies, is the wisdom of one who knows the
unity of things [said Krishna].
PPh 4.50 20 The whole world is but a manifestation of
Vishnu [said
Krishna], who is identical with all things...
PPh 4.51 8 If speculation tends thus to a terrific
unity, in which all things
are absorbed, action tends directly backwards to diversity.
PPh 4.51 14 These two principles [unity and diversity]
reappear and
interpenetrate all things...
PPh 4.53 13 ...[the Greeks'] perfect works in
architecture and sculpture
seemed things of course...
PPh 4.53 16 ...[the Greeks'] perfect works in
architecture and sculpture
seemed things of course, not more difficult than the completion
of...new
mills at Lowell. These things are in course, and may be taken for
granted.
PPh 4.53 25 ...Plato, in Egypt and in Eastern
pilgrimages, imbibed the idea
of one Deity, in which all things are absorbed.
PPh 4.56 8 Things added to things...are inventories.
PPh 4.56 9 Things used as language are inexhaustibly
attractive.
PPh 4.56 25 Exempt from envy, [the Supreme Ordainer]
wished that all
things should be as much as possible like himself.
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 4.62 7 Having paid his homage, as for the human
race, to the
Illimitable, [Plato] then stood erect, and for the human race affirmed,
And
yet things are knowable!...
PPh 4.62 14 ...the Asia in [Plato's] mind was first
heartily honored...and
now, refreshed and empowered by this worship, the instinct of Europe,
namely, culture, returns; and he cries, Yet things are knowable!
PPh 4.62 15 [Things] are knowable, because being from
one, things
correspond.
PPh 4.66 14 Of the five orders of things [said Plato],
only four can be
taught to the generality of men.
PPh 4.68 11 All things are in a scale;...
PPh 4.68 13 All things are symbolical;...
PPh 4.69 11 All things mount and mount.
PPh 4.69 14 ...beauty is the most lovely of all
things...
PPh 4.69 17 ...beauty is the most lovely of all things,
exciting hilarity and
shedding desire and confidence through the universe wherever it enters,
and
it enters in some degree into all things...
PPh 4.74 26 Crito bribed the jailer; but Socrates would
not go out by
treachery. Whatever inconvenience ensue, nothing is to be preferred
before
justice. These things I hear like pipes and drums...
PPh 4.76 14 ...[Plato's] writings have not...the vital
authority which...the
sermons of unlettered Arabs and Jews possess. There is an interval; and
to
cohesion, contact is necessary. I know not what can be said in reply to
this
criticism but that we have come to a fact in the nature of things: an
oak is
not an orange.
PPh 4.77 14 ...countries, and things of which countries
are made...have
passed through this man [Plato] as bread into his body, and become no
longer bread, but body...
PPh 4.78 7 ...admirable texts can be quoted on both
sides of every great
question from [Plato]. These things we are forced to say if we must
consider the effort of Plato or of any philosopher to dispose of
nature,-- which will not be disposed of.
PNR 4.86 6 [Plato] was born to behold the self-evolving
power of spirit...a
power which is the key at once to the centrality and the evanescence of
things.
PNR 4.86 17 ...all things have symmetry in [Plato's]
tablet.
PNR 4.87 1 The names of things, too, [to Plato] are
fatal, following the
nature of things.
PNR 4.87 2 The names of things, too, [to Plato] are
fatal, following the
nature of things.
PNR 4.87 18 [Plato] describes his own ideal, when he
paints, in Timaeus, a
god leading things from disorder into order.
SwM 4.94 1 For other things, I make poetry of them; but
the moral
sentiment makes poetry of me.
SwM 4.96 6 The soul having been often born...having
beheld the things
which are here, those which are in heaven and those which are beneath,
there is nothing of which she has not gained the knowledge...
SwM 4.96 12 ...all things in nature being linked and
related...nothing
hinders but that any man who has recalled to mind...one thing only,
should
of himself recover all his ancient knowledge...
SwM 4.96 23 ...by being assimilated to the original
soul, by whom and
after whom all things subsist, the soul of man does then easily flow
into all
things...
SwM 4.96 25 ...by being assimilated to the original
soul...the soul of man
does then easily flow into all things, and all things flow into it...
SwM 4.102 25 [Swedenborg's] superb speculation, as from
a tower, over
nature and arts, without ever losing sight of the texture and sequence
of
things, almost realizes his own picture...of the original integrity of
man.
SwM 4.106 20 The thoughts in which [Swedenborg] lived
were, the
universality of each law in nature;...the centrality of man in nature,
and the
connection that subsists throughout all things...
SwM 4.109 8 ...every thing at the end of one use is
lifted into a superior, and the ascent of these things climbs into
daemonic and celestial natures.
SwM 4.113 2 [Swedenborg] noted that in [nature]
proceeding from first
principles through her several subordinations, there was no state
through
which she did not pass, as if her path lay through all things.
SwM 4.113 25 The principle of all things, entrails
made/ Of smallest
entrails;.../
SwM 4.116 2 ...In our doctrine of Representations and
Correspondences [says Swedenborg] we shall treat...of the astonishing
things which occur... throughout nature...
SwM 4.116 5 ...In our doctrine of Representations and
Correspondences [says Swedenborg] we shall treat...of the astonishing
things which occur... which correspond so entirely to supreme and
spiritual things that one would
swear that the physical world was purely symbolical of the spiritual
world;...
SwM 4.116 21 [Swedenborg says] I intend hereafter to
communicate a
number of examples of such correspondences, together with a vocabulary
containing the terms of spiritual things, as well as of the physical
things for
which they are to be substituted.
SwM 4.117 16 [Correspondence] required an insight that
could rank things
in order and series;...
SwM 4.117 26 ...literature has no book in which the
symbolism of things is
scientifically opened.
SwM 4.118 13 ...whether it be that these things will
not be intellectually
learned, or that many centuries must elaborate and compose so rare and
opulent a soul,--there is no comet, rock-stratum...that, for itself,
does not
interest more scholars and classifiers than the meaning and upshot of
the
frame of things.
SwM 4.118 20 ...there is no comet...or fungus, that,
for itself, does not
interest more scholars and classifiers than the meaning and upshot of
the
frame of things.
SwM 4.119 25 ...[Swedenborg] affirms that he sees, with
the internal sight, the things that are in another life, more clearly
than he sees the things which
are here in the world.
SwM 4.119 27 ...[Swedenborg] affirms that he sees, with
the internal sight, the things that are in another life, more clearly
than he sees the things which
are here in the world.
SwM 4.120 13 The correspondence between thoughts and
things
henceforward occupied [Swedenborg].
SwM 4.120 19 The reason why all and single things, in
the heavens and on
earth, are representative, is because they exist from an influx of the
Lord, through heaven [said Swedenborg].
SwM 4.123 13 ...[Swedenborg] is a rich discoverer, and
of things which
most import us to know.
SwM 4.123 16 [Swedenborg] saw things in their law...
SwM 4.125 1 [To Swedenborg] All things in the universe
arrange
themselves to each person anew, according to his ruling love.
SwM 4.127 14 The book [Swedenborg's Conjugal Love] had
been grand if
the Hebraism had been omitted and the law stated...with that scope for
ascension of state which the nature of things requires.
SwM 4.133 17 All [Swedenborg's] types mean the same few
things.
SwM 4.136 23 The Lutheran bishop's son, for whom the
heavens are
opened, so that he sees with eyes and in the richest symbolic forms the
awful truth of things...with all these grandeurs resting upon him,
remains
the Lutheran bishop's son;...
SwM 4.143 19 It is remarkable that this man
[Swedenborg], who, by his
perception of symbols, saw the poetic construction of things...remained
entirely devoid of the whole apparatus of poetic expression...
MoS 4.150 7 One class [predisposed to Sensation]...is
conversant with... cities and persons, and the bringing certain things
to pass;...
MoS 4.152 9 Things always bring their own philosophy
with them, that is, prudence.
MoS 4.157 8 [The skeptic says] Why think to shut up all
things in your
narrow coop...
MoS 4.157 10 [The skeptic says] Why think to shut up
all things in your
narrow coop, when we know there are not one or two only, but ten,
twenty, a thousand things, and unlike?
MoS 4.169 3 Montaigne...likes pain because it makes him
feel himself and
realize things;...
MoS 4.170 11 We are persuaded that a thread runs
through all things...
MoS 4.171 8 The nonconformist and the rebel say all
manner of
unanswerable things against the existing republic...
MoS 4.180 15 Can you not believe that a man of earnest
and burly habit
may...want a rougher instruction, want men, labor, trade, farming, war,
hunger, plenty, love, hatred, doubt and terror to make things plain to
him;...
MoS 4.181 26 ...[the spiritualist] is forced to say, O,
these things will be as
they must be...
MoS 4.185 9 Things seem to say one thing, and say the
reverse.
MoS 4.185 11 Things seem to tend downward...
MoS 4.186 6 ...let [a man] learn to bear the
disappearance of things he was
wont to reverence without losing his reverence;...
ShP 4.197 2 Other men say wise things as well as [the
poet];...
ShP 4.197 3 Other men say wise things as well as [the
poet]; only they say
a good many foolish things, and do not know when they have spoken
wisely.
ShP 4.213 12 This power...of transferring the inmost
truth of things into
music and verse, makes [Shakespeare] the type of the poet...
ShP 4.213 17 Things were mirrored in [Shakespeare's]
poetry without loss
or blur...
ShP 4.214 11 No recipe can be given for the making of a
Shakspeare; but
the possibility of the translation of things into song is demonstrated.
ShP 4.217 3 Shakspeare, Homer, Dante, Chaucer...knew
that a tree had
another use than for apples...and the ball of the earth, than for
tillage and
roads: that these things bore a second and finer harvest to the mind...
NMW 4.226 25 ...Mirabeau...felt that these things which
his presence
inspired were as much his own as if he had said them...
NMW 4.229 4 [Napoleon] has not lost his native sense
and sympathy with
things.
NMW 4.229 7 To be sure there are men enough who are
immersed in
things...
NMW 4.258 13 It was the nature of things...which
baulked and ruined [Napoleon];...
GoW 4.261 8 All things are engaged in writing their
history.
GoW 4.262 26 [The writer] counts it all nonsense that
they say, that some
things are undescribable.
GoW 4.264 16 ...nature has more splendid endowments for
those whom she
elects to a superior office; for the class of scholars or writers...who
are
impelled to exhibit the facts in order, and so to supply the axis on
which the
frame of things turns.
GoW 4.264 20 Nature has dearly at heart the formation
of the speculative
man, or scholar. It is an end...prepared in the original casting of
things.
GoW 4.264 24 [The scholar] is...one of the estates of
the realm, provided
and prepared...in the knitting and contexture of things.
GoW 4.267 14 ...although [the Quaker and the Shaker]
each prates of spirit, there is no spirit, but repetition, which is
anti-spiritual. But where are his
new things of to-day?
GoW 4.271 6 We conceive...modern life to respect a
multitude of things, which is distracting.
GoW 4.274 21 [Goethe] has said the best things about
nature that ever were
said.
GoW 4.276 4 [Goethe] hates...to be made to say over
again some old wife's
fable that has had possession of men's faith these thousand years. He
may
as well see if it is true as another. He sifts it. I am here, he would
say, to be
the measure and judge of these things.
GoW 4.281 17 There must be a man behind the book; a
personality...which
exists to see and state things so, and not otherwise;...
GoW 4.281 18 There must be a man behind the book; a
personality... holding things because they are things.
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 4.286 1 The reaction of things on the man is the
only noteworthy
result.
ET1 5.13 22 [Coleridge said] There were only three
things which the
government had brought into that garden of delights [Sicily], namely,
itch, pox and famine.
ET1 5.20 5 There may be, [Wordsworth] said, in America
some vulgarity
in manner, but that 's not important. That comes of the pioneer state
of
things.
ET1 5.20 11 I [Wordsworth] am told that things are
boasted of in the
second class of society there [in America], which, in England,--God
knows, are done in England every day, but would never be spoken of.
ET5 5.78 14 King Ethelwald spoke the language of his
race when he
planted himself at Wimborne and said he would do one of two things, or
there live, or there lie.
ET5 5.85 13 The spirit of system, attention to details,
and the subordination
of details, or the not driving things too finely...constitute that
dispatch of
business which makes the mercantile power of England.
ET7 5.117 26 Geoffrey of Monmouth says of King
Aurelius, uncle of
Arthur, that above all things he hated a lie.
ET8 5.130 9 [The English] are...in all things very much
steeped in their
temperament...
ET9 5.146 11 ...the ordinary phrases in all good
society, of postponing or
disparaging one's own things in talking with a stranger, are seriously
mistaken by [the English] for an insuppressible homage to the merits of
their nation;...
ET10 5.162 27 All things precious, or useful...are
sucked into this
commerce and floated to London.
ET10 5.164 20 Vested rights are awful things...
ET11 5.174 22 The things these English have done were
not done without
peril of life...
ET11 5.186 9 ...[English nobility] see things so
grouped and amassed as to
infer easily the sum and genius...
ET11 5.191 2 Castles are proud things, but 't is safest
to be outside of them.
ET11 5.192 16 In the reign of the Fourth George, things
do not seem to
have mended [in England]...
ET12 5.211 19 English wealth falling on their school
and university
training, makes a systematic reading of the best authors, and to the
end of a
knowledge how the things whereof they treat really stand...
ET13 5.228 25 The English, abhorring change in all
things...are dreadfully
given to cant.
ET13 5.230 27 Electricity cannot be made fast...so that
you shall...keep it
fixed, as the English do with their things, forevermore;...
ET14 5.233 3 ...the Englishman...takes hold of things
by the right end...
ET14 5.241 26 A few generalizations always circulate in
the world...and
these are in the world constants, like the Copernican and Newtonian
theories in physics. In England these...do all have a kind of filial
retrospect
to Plato and the Greeks. Of this kind is...[Bacon's] doctrine of
poetry, which accommodates the shows of things to the desires of the
mind...
ET16 5.274 26 ...[Carlyle]...compared the savans of
Somerset House to the
boy who asked Confucius how many stars in the sky? Confucius replied,
he
minded things near him: then said the boy, how many hairs are there in
your eyebrows? Confucius said, he did n't know and did n't care.
ET17 5.291 3 In these comments on an old journey
[English Traits], now
revised after seven busy years have much changed men and things in
England, I have abstained from reference to persons...
ET19 5.310 19 ...these things are not for me to say;
these compliments, though true, would better come from one who felt and
understood these
merits more.
F 6.1 4 Birds with auguries on their wings/ Chanted
undeceiving things,/ [The bard] to beckon, him to warn;/...
F 6.14 11 In science we have to consider two things...
F 6.15 2 We have two things,-the circumstance, and the
life.
F 6.18 22 In a large city, the most casual things, and
things whose beauty
lies in their casuality, are produced as punctually...as the baker's
muffin for
breakfast.
F 6.25 16 ...the great day of the feast of life, is
that in which the inward eye
opens to the Unity in things...
F 6.26 8 All things are touched and changed by [the
mind].
F 6.26 15 Where [the mind] shines...all things make a
musical or pictorial
impression.
F 6.31 1 ...whether, seeing these two things, fate and
power, we are
permitted to believe in unity?
F 6.38 4 [A creature] is not possible until the
invisible things are right for
him...
F 6.39 10 Things ripen...
F 6.47 4 ...hence the high caution, that since we are
sure of having what we
wish, we beware to ask only for high things.
F 6.48 27 If we thought men were free in the sense that
in a single
exception one fantastical will could prevail over the law of things, it
were
all one as if a child's hand could pull down the sun.
Pow 6.54 6 [All successful men] believed that things
went not by luck, but
by law;...
Pow 6.54 8 [All successful men] believed...that there
was not a weak or a
cracked link in the chain that joins the first and last of things.
Pow 6.56 15 One man...is in sympathy with the course of
things;...
Pow 6.73 6 Ah! said a brave painter to me, thinking on
these things, if a
man has failed, you will find he has dreamed instead of working.
Wth 6.85 24 ...the mind acts in bringing things from
where they abound to
where they are wanted;...
Wth 6.88 15 ...[nature]...takes away warmth, laughter,
sleep, friends and
daylight, until [a man] has fought his way to his own loaf. Then...she
urges
him to the acquisition of such things as belong to him.
Wth 6.89 27 ...all grand and subtile things...are
[man's] natural playmates...
Wth 6.90 8 ...[the human being] is successful, or his
education is carried on
just so far, as...the degree in which he takes up things into himself.
Wth 6.98 7 Every man wishes to see...the mountains and
craters in the
moon; yet how few can buy a telescope! and of those, scarcely one would
like the trouble of keeping it in order and exhibiting it. So of
electrical and
chemical apparatus, and many the like things.
Wth 6.99 10 In Europe, where the feudal forms secure
the permanence of
wealth in certain families, those families buy and preserve these
things [works of art] and lay them open to the public.
Wth 6.103 12 The value of a dollar is, to buy just
things;...
Wth 6.107 3 ...every man has a certain
satisfaction...when he sees that
things themselves dictate the price...
Wth 6.108 23 One might say that all things are of one
price;...
Wth 6.109 14 The ancient poet said, The gods sell all
things at a fair price.
Wth 6.120 26 The rule is...to learn practically the
secret...that things
themselves refuse to be mismanaged...
Wth 6.123 10 ...the citizen comes to know that his
predecessor the farmer
built the house in the right spot for...the convenience to the pasture,
the
garden, the field and the road. So Dock Square yields the point, and
things
have their own way.
Wth 6.125 6 ...these things are so in nature. All
things ascend...
Wth 6.125 7 ...these things are so in nature. All
things ascend...
Ctr 6.143 12 [The boy] is infatuated for weeks with
whist and chess; but
presently will find out...that when he rises from the game too long
played, he is vacant and forlorn and despises himself. Thenceforward it
takes place
with other things...
Ctr 6.145 8 I have been quoted as saying captious
things about travel;...
Ctr 6.153 6 ...we want cities as the centres where the
best things are found...
Ctr 6.154 26 How can you mind...even the bringing
things to pass,--when
you think how paltry are the machinery and the workers?
Ctr 6.160 23 The orator who has once seen things in
their divine order will
never quite lose sight of this...
Ctr 6.163 20 Bettine replies to Goethe's mother, who
chides her disregard
of dress,--If I cannot do as I have a mind in our poor Frankfort, I
shall not
carry things far.
Bhr 6.169 20 Manners are the happy way of doing
things;...
Bhr 6.189 10 The things of a man for which we visit him
were done in the
dark and cold.
Wsp 6.205 14 ...some of the Pacific islanders flog
their gods when things
take an unfavorable turn.
Wsp 6.212 14 ...the official men can in no wise help
you in any question of
to-day, they deriving entirely from the old dead things.
Wsp 6.213 10 There is a principle which is the basis of
things...
Wsp 6.217 10 ...not by our private but by our public
force can we share and
know the nature of things.
Wsp 6.219 20 Religion or worship is the attitude of
those...who see that
against all appearances the nature of things works for truth and right
forever.
Wsp 6.220 17 ...all things go by number, rule and
weight.
Wsp 6.221 16 Law it is...which is smallest of the
least, and largest of the
large; all, and knowing all things;...
Wsp 6.222 19 ...things are as broad as they are long,
is not a rule for
Littleton or Portland, but for the universe.
Wsp 6.223 17 ...things themselves are detective.
Wsp 6.226 22 This reaction, this sincerity is the
property of all things.
Wsp 6.230 25 He only is rightly immortal to whom all
things are immortal.
Wsp 6.241 1 There are two things, said Mahomet, which I
abhor, the
learned in his infidelities, and the fool in his devotions.
CbW 6.254 20 There is a tendency in things to right
themselves...
CbW 6.254 22 ...the war or revolution or bankruptcy
that shatters a rotten
system, allows things to take a new and natural order.
CbW 6.257 27 The right partisan is a heady, narrow man,
who, because he
does not see many things, sees some one thing with heat and
exaggeration...
CbW 6.260 21 ...what we ask daily, is to be
conventional. ... But the wise
gods say, No, we have better things for thee.
CbW 6.264 14 All healthy things are sweet-tempered.
CbW 6.264 17 ...whoever sees the law which distributes
things, does not
despond...
CbW 6.274 7 It makes no difference, in looking back
five years...whether
you...have been carried in a neat equipage or in a ridiculous truck:
these
things are forgotten so quickly...
CbW 6.277 8 Youthful aspirations are fine things...but
will you stick?
CbW 6.278 11 I prefer to say, with the old prophet,
Seekest thou great
things? seek them not...
Bty 6.281 3 Our books approach very slowly the things
we most wish to
know.
Bty 6.288 19 The question of Beauty takes us out of
surfaces to thinking of
the foundations of things.
Bty 6.289 11 We ascribe beauty to that...which stands
related to all things;...
Bty 6.302 26 Things are pretty, graceful, rich,
elegant, handsome, but, until
they speak to the imagination, not yet beautiful.
Bty 6.305 14 ...when the second-sight of the mind is
opened, now one color
or form or gesture, and now another, has a pungency, as if a more
interior
ray had been emitted, disclosing its deep holdings in the frame of
things.
Ill 6.308 5 When thou dost return/ .../ Beholding.../
...out of endeavor/ To
change and to flow,/ The gas become solid,/ And phantoms and nothings/
Return to be things,/ And endless imbroglio/ Is law and the
world,--/Then
first shalt thou know,/ That in the wild turmoil,/ Horsed on the
Proteus,/ Thou ridest to power,/ And to endurance./
Ill 6.310 3 The mysteries and scenery of the [Mammoth]
cave had the same
dignity that belongs to all natural objects, and which shames the fine
things
to which we foppishly compare them.
Ill 6.321 27 From day to day the capital facts of human
life are hidden from
our eyes. Suddenly the mist rolls up and reveals them, and we think how
much good time is gone that might have been saved had any hint of these
things been shown.
SS 7.15 23 ...most men...say good things to you in
private, but will not
stand to them in public.
Civ 7.20 11 In other races [than the Indian and the
negro]...the like progress
that is made by a boy when he cuts his eye-teeth, as we say,--childish
illusions passing daily away and he seeing things really and
comprehensively,--is made by tribes.
Art2 7.39 4 ...Art is the spirit's voluntary use and
combination of things to
serve its end.
Art2 7.39 14 ...Plato rightly said, Those things which
are said to be done by
Nature are indeed done by Divine Art.
Art2 7.42 20 ...in our handiwork, we do few things by
muscular force...
Art2 7.45 5 A very coarse imitation of the human form
on canvas, or in
wax-work;...these things give to unpractised eyes...almost as much
pleasure
as a statue of Canova or a picture of Titian.
Art2 7.49 14 The wonders of Shakspeare are things which
he saw whilst he
stood aside...
Art2 7.49 17 The poet aims...to subject to thought
things seen without (voluntary) thought.
Art2 7.53 16 The gayest charm of beauty has a root in
the constitution of
things.
Art2 7.55 7 It would be easy to show of many fine
things in the world...the
origin in quite simple local necessities.
Elo1 7.75 23 In a Senate or other business committee,
the solid result
depends on a few men with working talent. They know how...to put things
into a practical shape...
Elo1 7.82 12 ...if there be personality in the orator,
the face of things
changes.
Elo1 7.89 20 Where [the orator] looks, all things fly
to their places.
Elo1 7.94 16 ...whilst [the preacher] speaks things, I
feel that he is touching
some of my relations, and I am uneasy;...
DL 7.106 11 [The child's] imaginative life dresses all
things in their best.
DL 7.109 17 A man's money...should represent to him the
things he would
willingliest do with it.
DL 7.109 22 We ask the price of many things in shops
and stalls...
DL 7.109 23 ...some things each man buys without
hesitation;...
DL 7.110 8 Do not ask [the scholar] to...join a company
to build a factory
or a fishing-craft. These things are also to be done, but not by such
as he.
DL 7.112 5 The shortest enumeration of our wants in
this rugged climate
appalls us by the multitude of things not easy to be done.
DL 7.112 24 If the children...are...schooled and at
home fostered by the
parents,--then does the hospitality of the house suffer;... ... If all
are well
attended, then must the master and mistress be studious of particulars
at the
cost of their own accomplishments and growth; or persons are treated as
things.
DL 7.116 17 ...many things betoken a revolution of
opinion and practice in
regard to manual labor...
DL 7.118 6 With a change of aim has followed a change
of the whole scale
by which men and things were wont to be measured.
DL 7.118 27 I pray you, O excellent wife, not to cumber
yourself and me to
get a rich dinner for this man or this woman who has alighted at our
gate, nor a bed-chamber made ready at too great a cost. These
things...they can
get for a dollar at any village.
DL 7.119 10 Certainly, let the board be spread and let
the bed be dressed
for the traveller; but let not the emphasis of hospitality lie in these
things.
DL 7.129 9 ...when men shall meet as they should...it
shall be the festival of
Nature, which all things symbolize;...
DL 7.129 11 ...perhaps Love is only the highest symbol
of Friendship, as
all other things seem symbols of love.
Farm 7.144 24 ...the air is the receptacle from which
all things spring...
Farm 7.145 6 All things are flowing...
Farm 7.146 20 ...[the farmer]...is taught the power
that lurks in petty things.
WD 7.157 3 Man is the meter of all things, said
Aristotle;...
WD 7.163 13 Things begin to obey [man].
WD 7.163 27 [Tantalus] is now in great
spirits;...thinks he shall bottle the
wave. It is however getting a little doubtful. Things have an ugly look
still.
WD 7.170 20 'T is pitiful the things by which we are
rich or poor...
WD 7.179 3 I am of the opinion of Pliny that whilst we
are musing on these
things, we are adding to the length of our lives.
WD 7.179 15 ...if a man is at once acquainted with the
geometric
foundations of things and with their festal splendor, his poetry is
exact and
his arithmetic musical.
WD 7.179 23 ...him I reckon the most learned
scholar...who can unfold the
theory of this particular Wednesday. Can he uncover the
ligaments...which
attach the dull men and things we know to the First Cause?
Boks 7.189 3 ...the best [books] are but records, and
not the things
recorded;...
Boks 7.212 25 The man asks for a novel,--that is, asks
leave for a few
hours...to paint things as they ought to be.
Boks 7.214 6 ...books that...distribute things...after
the laws of right reason... put us on our feet again...
Boks 7.220 2 Is there any geography in these things
[sacred thoughts]?
Clbs 7.229 19 [The student] seeks intelligent
persons...who will give him
provocation, and at once and easily the old motion begins in his
brain...and
the infinite opulence of things is again shown him.
Clbs 7.230 9 Things are in pairs...
Clbs 7.231 6 The reply of old Isocrates comes so often
to mind,--The things
which are now seasonable I cannot say; and for the things which I can
say it
is not now the time.
Clbs 7.231 7 The reply of old Isocrates comes so often
to mind,--The things
which are now seasonable I cannot say; and for the things which I can
say it
is not now the time.
Clbs 7.233 26 Diderot said of the Abbe Galiani: He was
a treasure in rainy
days; and if the cabinet-makers made such things, everybody would have
one in the country.
Clbs 7.246 26 Things which you fancy wrong
[manufacturers, merchants
and shipmasters] know to be right and profitable;...
Clbs 7.247 1 Things which you fancy wrong
[manufacturers, merchants
and shipmasters] know to be right and profitable; things which you
reckon
superstitious they know to be true.
Clbs 7.248 22 ...it was when things went prosperously,
and the company
was full of honor, at the banquet of the Cid, that the guests all were
joyful...
Cour 7.274 23 Sacred courage indicates that a man loves
an idea better
than all things in the world;...
Suc 7.295 8 ...it is a nice point to discriminate this
self-trust...from the
disease to which it is allied,--the exaggeration of the part which we
can
play;--yet they are two things.
Suc 7.295 26 Feel yourself, and be not daunted by
things.
Suc 7.300 26 The mind yields sympathetically to the
tendencies or law
which stream through things...
Suc 7.302 17 Fontenelle said: There are three things
about which I have
curiosity, though I know nothing of them,--music, poetry and love.
Suc 7.311 16 ...the inner life...does not learn to do
things...
OA 7.326 25 [The youth] is tormented with the want of
correspondence
between things and thoughts.
OA 7.329 2 The best things are of secular growth.
PI 8.3 15 The common sense which...takes things at
their word...believes in
the existence of matter...because it agrees with ourselves...
PI 8.3 16 The common sense which...takes...things as
they appear,-- believes in the existence of matter...because it agrees
with ourselves...
PI 8.5 19 ...we see that things wear different names
and faces, but belong to
one family;...
PI 8.9 6 ...[the student] observes that all things in
Nature...have a
mysterious relation to his thoughts and his life;...
PI 8.12 4 ...nothing but great weight in things can
afford a quite literal
speech.
PI 8.19 8 Whilst common sense looks at things or
visible Nature as real and
final facts, poetry, or the imagination which dictates it, is a second
sight...
PI 8.19 21 ...Poets are standing transporters, whose
employment consists... in producing apparent imitations of unapparent
natures, and inscribing
things unapparent in the apparent fabrication of the world;...
PI 8.19 24 ...the world exists for thought: it is to
make appear things which
hide...
PI 8.20 3 Bacon expressed the same sense in his
definition, Poetry
accommodates the shows of things to the desires of the mind;...
PI 8.20 11 ...[Swedenborg said]: Names, countries,
nations and the like are
not at all known to those who are in heaven; they have no idea of such
things, but of the realities signified thereby.
PI 8.21 5 The poet contemplates the central identity,
sees it undulate and
roll this way and that, with divine flowings, through remotest
things;...
PI 8.22 17 [Man] wishes to be rich, to be old, to be
young, that things may
obey him.
PI 8.23 20 Whatever one act we do, whatever one thing
we learn, we are
doing and learning all things...
PI 8.25 2 This metonymy, or seeing the same sense in
things so diverse, gives a pure pleasure.
PI 8.27 5 As a power [poetry] is the perception of the
symbolic character of
things...
PI 8.28 6 The words [Fancy and Imagination] are often
used, and the things
confounded.
PI 8.29 22 ...[Herbert, Swedenborg, Wordsworth] know
that this
correspondence of things to thoughts is far deeper than they can
penetrate...
PI 8.29 24 ...[Herbert, Swedenborg, Wordsworth] know
that this
correspondence of things to thoughts...is elemental, or in the core of
things.
PI 8.36 17 [The poet] is very well convinced that the
great moments of life
are those in which...the tritest and nearest ways and words and things
have
been illuminated into prophets and teachers.
PI 8.37 7 There is no subject that does not belong to
[the poet],--politics, economy, manufactures and stock-brokerage...only
these things, placed in
their true order, are poetry;...
PI 8.42 1 Events or things are only the fulfilment of
the prediction of the
faculties.
PI 8.42 12 ...guided by [thoughts and laws], [the poet]
is ascending from an
interest in in visible things to an interest in that which they
signify...
PI 8.42 25 We cannot know things by words and
writing...
PI 8.47 4 Young people like...things in pairs and
alternatives;...
PI 8.51 14 Time sadly overcometh all things...
PI 8.52 15 ...when we rise into the world of thought,
and think of these
things [food, fire, our work, tools, and material necessities] only for
what
they signify, speech refines into order and harmony.
PI 8.57 10 [The early bard's] advantage is that his
words are things...
PI 8.58 9 ...[The wind] has no fear, nor the rude wants
of created things./
PI 8.61 6 [The voice said to Sir Gawaine] You were wont
to know me well, but thus things are interwoven...
PI 8.71 19 The nature of things is flowing...
PI 8.71 27 ...for obvious municipal or parietal uses
God has given us a bias
or a rest on to-day's forms. Hence the shudder of joy with which in
each
clear moment we recognize the metamorphosis, because it is always a
conquest, a surprise from the heart of things.
SA 8.80 2 Whilst almost everybody has a supplicating
eye turned on events
and things and other persons, a few natures are central...
SA 8.89 15 ...now and then we say things to our mates,
or hear things from
them, which seem to put it out of the power of the parties to be
strangers
again.
SA 8.89 16 ...now and then we say things to our mates,
or hear things from
them, which seem to put it out of the power of the parties to be
strangers
again.
SA 8.96 17 ...things said for conversation are chalk
eggs.
SA 8.96 18 Don't say things.
Elo2 8.110 3 ...whose mind soever is fully possessed
with a fervent desire
to know good things...when such a man would speak, his words...trip
about
him at command...
Elo2 8.111 24 ...[in a debate] much power is to be
exhibited which is not
yet called into existence, but is to be suggested on the spot by the
unexpected turn things may take...
Elo2 8.116 21 ...[the orator] taking no counsel of past
things...surprises [the
people] with his tidings...
Res 8.138 21 ...if you tell me...that man only rightly
knows himself as far as
he has experimented on things,--I am invigorated...
Res 8.151 9 [Taste] should be extended to gardens and
grounds, and mainly
one thing should be illustrated: that life in the country wants all
things on a
low tone...
Comc 8.159 4 Separate any object...from the connection
of things...it
becomes at once comic;...
Comc 8.159 26 ...the best of all jokes is the
sympathetic contemplation of
things by the understanding from the philosopher's point of view.
Comc 8.169 12 The lie [in poverty] is in the surrender
of the man to his
appearance;... It affects us oddly, as to see things turned upside
down...
Comc 8.170 20 He whom all things should serve, serves
some one of his
own tools.
QO 8.175 4 All things wear a lustre which is the gift
of the present, and a
tarnish of time.
QO 8.197 2 In hours of high mental activity we
sometimes do the book too
much honor, reading out of it better things than the author wrote...
QO 8.200 1 ...all things are in flux.
QO 8.200 21 Every one of my writings [said Goethe] has
been furnished to
me by a thousand different persons, a thousand things...
PC 8.210 27 People have in all countries been burned
and stoned for saying
things which are commonplaces at all our breakfast-tables.
PC 8.221 23 To this material essence [centrality]
answers Truth, in the
intellectual world,-Truth...the soundness and health of things...
PC 8.223 21 All things admit of this extended sense...
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 8.227 5 Great men,-the age goes on their credit; but
all the rest, when
their wires are continued and not cut, can do as signal things...
PPo 8.240 17 Solomon had three talismans...second, the
glass in which he
saw the secrets of his enemies and the causes of all things,
figured;...
PPo 8.251 11 In general what is more tedious than
dedications or
panegyrics addressed to grandees? Yet in the Divan you would not skip
them, since [Hafiz's] muse seldom supports him better:-What lovelier
forms things wear,/ Now that the Shah comes back!/...
PPo 8.262 4 The falcon answered [the nightingale], Be
all ear:/ I, experienced in affairs,/ See fifty things, say never one;/
But thee the people
prizes not,/ Who, doing nothing, say'st a thousand./
Insp 8.274 23 Plato...notes that the perception is only
accomplished by long
familiarity with the objects of intellect, and a life according to the
things
themselves.
Insp 8.286 11 The French have a proverb to the effect
that not the day only, but all things have their morning...
Grts 8.313 27 The populace will say, with Horne Tooke,
If you would be
powerful, pretend to be powerful. I prefer to say, with the old Hebrew
prophet, Seekest thou great things?-seek them not;...
Grts 8.314 9 It is easy to draw traits [of greatness]
from Napoleon, who... was intellectual and knew the law of things.
Imtl 8.323 22 ...we are as ignorant of the state which
preceded our present
existence as of that which will follow it. Things being so, I feel that
if this
new faith can give us more certainty, it deserves to be received.
Imtl 8.327 22 Milton anticipated the leading thought of
Swedenborg, when
he wrote, in Paradise Lost,-What if Earth/ Be but the shadow of Heaven,
and things therein/ Each to the other like more than on earth is
thought?/
Imtl 8.327 25 Swedenborg...announced many things true
and admirable...
Imtl 8.334 3 After science begins, belief of permanence
must follow in a
healthy mind. Things so attractive, designs so wise...and the contriver
of it
all forever hidden!
Imtl 8.342 18 Ignorant people confound reverence for
the intuitions with
egotism. There is no confusion in the things themselves.
Imtl 8.347 13 He has [immortality], and he alone, who
gives life to all
names, persons, things, where he comes.
Imtl 8.352 1 Thinking the soul as unbodily among
bodies, firm among
fleeting things, the wise man casts off all grief.
Dem1 10.10 18 Things are significant enough, Heaven
knows;...
Dem1 10.17 24 I believed that I discovered in
nature...somewhat which
manifested itself only in contradiction, and therefore could not be
grasped
by a conception, much less by a word. ... This, which seemed to insert
itself
between all other things...I named the Demoniacal...
Dem1 10.19 11 I set down these things as I find them...
Dem1 10.21 14 There are many things of which a wise man
might wish to
be ignorant...
Dem1 10.26 3 It is wholly a false view to couple these
things [Animal
Magnetism, Mesmerism] in any manner with the religious nature and
sentiment...
Aris 10.35 8 ...[the young adventurer] lends himself to
each malignant
party that assails what is eminent. He will one day know that this
is...a
distinction in the nature of things;...
Aris 10.39 7 I wish...men of universal politics, who
are interested in things
in proportion to their truth and magnitude;...
Aris 10.43 26 ...when the well-mixed man is
born...capable of impressions
from all things, and not too susceptible,-then no gift need be bestowed
on
him...
Aris 10.46 23 ...the constitution of things has
distributed a new quality or
talent to each mind...
Aris 10.46 25 ...the revolution of things is always
bringing the need, now of
this, now of that...
Aris 10.54 4 ...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.
Aris 10.54 24 The manners of course must have that
depth and firmness of
tone to attest their centrality in the nature of the man. I mean the
things
themselves shall be judges, and determine.
Aris 10.56 24 It is a measure of culture, the number of
things taken for
granted.
Aris 10.58 7 Prosperity and pound-cake are for very
young gentlemen, whom such things content;...
Aris 10.64 17 There are certain conditions in the
highest degree favorable
to the tranquillity of spirit and to that magnanimity we so prize. And
mainly
the habit of considering...things in masses...
Aris 10.65 7 ...for the day that now is, a man of
generous spirit...will use a
high prudence in the conduct of life to guard himself from being
dissipated
on many things.
PerF 10.77 24 Every valuable person who joins in an
enterprise...what he
chiefly brings...is...his way of classifying and seeing things...
PerF 10.84 15 Things work to their ends, not to
yours...
PerF 10.86 5 Things are saturated with the moral law.
PerF 10.87 19 ...things endure as they share [our moral
sentiment];...
Chr2 10.89 6 Shun passion, fold the hands of thrift,/
Sit still, and Truth is
near;/ Suddenly it will uplift/ Your eyelids to the sphere:/ Wait a
little, you
shall see/ The portraiture of things to be./
Chr2 10.91 15 Surely it is not to prove or show the
truth of things...no, it is
for benefit, that all subsists.
Chr2 10.93 27 [The moral intuition]...looks to no
superior essence. It is the
reason of things.
Chr2 10.98 21 If all things are taken away, I have
still all things in my
relation to the Eternal.
Chr2 10.98 22 If all things are taken away, I have
still all things in my
relation to the Eternal.
Chr2 10.100 19 It happens now and then, in the ages,
that a soul is born
which offers no impediment to the Divine Spirit...and all its thoughts
are
perceptions of things as they are, without any infirmity of earth.
Chr2 10.102 23 ...when used with emphasis, [character]
points to what no
events can change, that is, a will built on the reason of things.
Edc1 10.126 16 ...when one and the same
man...leaves...the stupor of the
senses, to enter into the quasi-omniscience of high thought...all
limits
disappear. No horizon shuts down. He sees things in their causes...
Edc1 10.127 9 Victory over things is the office of man.
Edc1 10.127 11 Victory over things is the office of
man. Of course, until it
is accomplished, it is the war and insult of things over him.
Edc1 10.132 17 Day creeps after day, each full of
facts, dull, strange, despised things, that we cannot enough despise...
Edc1 10.132 20 Day creeps after day, each full of
facts...that we cannot
enough despise,-call heavy, prosaic and desert. The time we seek to
kill: the attention it is elegant to divert from things around us.
Edc1 10.147 7 Make [a boy] call things by their right
names.
Edc1 10.159 12 Consent yourself to be an organ of your
highest thought, and lo! suddenly you...are the fountain of an energy
that goes pulsing on
with waves of benefit...to the circumference of things.
Supl 10.164 8 If the talker [with the superlative
temperament] lose a tooth, he thinks the universal thaw and dissolution
of things has come.
Supl 10.168 26 The first valuable power in a reasonable
mind, one would
say, was...the power to receive things as they befall...
Supl 10.169 12 It seems as if inflation were a disease
incident to too much
use of words, and the remedy lay in recourse to things.
Supl 10.177 26 ...the Orientals excel in costly
arts...things which are the
poetry and superlative of commerce.
SovE 10.189 4 ...a sublime confidence is fed at the
bottom of the heart
that...an eternal, beneficent necessity is always bringing things
right;...
SovE 10.189 26 See how these things look in the page of
history.
SovE 10.199 11 It is the sturdiest prejudice in the
public mind that religion
is...a department...to which the tests and judgment men are ready
enough to
show on other things, do not apply.
Prch 10.218 24 ...I see not how the great God prepares
to satisfy the heart
in the new order of things.
Prch 10.221 4 ...this examination [of religion]
resulting in the constant
detection of errors, the flattered understanding assumes to judge all
things...
Prch 10.221 7 The understanding presumes in things
above its sphere...
Prch 10.225 5 ...it is clear...is it not, that...when
[a man] shall act from one
motive, and all his faculties play true...this...will give...not more
facts, nor
new combinations, but divination, or direct intuition of the state of
men and
things?
Prch 10.225 27 ...only those distinctions hold which
are, in the nature of
things, not matters of positive ordinance.
Prch 10.226 9 We must reconcile ourselves to the new
order of things.
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 7 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 10.230 9 [The man of practice or worldly force]
does not forgive an
application in the preacher to the merchant's things.
Prch 10.232 13 The value of a principle is the number
of things it will
explain;...
Prch 10.237 17 ...the upper eyes behold causes and the
connection of things.
MoL 10.250 12 [Nature says to the American] Other
things you have begun
to do,-to strike off the chains which snuffling hypocrites had bound on
a
weaker race.
MoL 10.255 14 Our people...do not wish, of all things,
to be in the minority.
Schr 10.263 15 The scholar is here to fill others with
love and courage by
confirming their trust in the love and wisdom which are at the heart of
all
things;...
Schr 10.271 19 There could always be traced...some
vestiges of a faith in
genius, as...in hospitalities; as if men would signify their sense that
genius
and virtue should not pay money for house and land and bread, because
they have a royal right in these and in all things...
Schr 10.271 22 ...[genius and virtue] are the First
Good, of which Plato
affirms that all things are for its sake...
Schr 10.272 2 ...men know that ideas are the parents of
men and things;...
Schr 10.284 2 ...manners, temper, lion-heart, are all
good things...
Schr 10.285 16 ...[Genius]...flings itself on real
elemental things...
Schr 10.288 12 ...it is so much easier to say many
things than to explain
one.
Plu 10.300 5 ...though Plutarch is as plain-spoken [as
Montaigne], his
moral sentiment is always pure. What better praise has any writer
received
than he whom Montaigne finds frank in giving things, not words...
Plu 10.308 4 [Plutarch] says of Socrates that he
endeavored to bring reason
and things together...
Plu 10.311 1 ...though curious in the questions of the
schools on the nature
and genesis of things, [Plutarch's] extreme interest in every trait of
character and his broad humanity, lead him constantly to Morals...
Plu 10.311 14 Plutarch is genial; with an endless
interest in all human and
divine things;...
LLNE 10.323 1 Of old things all are over old,/ Of good
things none are
good enough;-/ We 'll show that we can help to frame/ A world of other
stuff./ Rob Roy's Grave. Wordsworth.
LLNE 10.323 2 Of old things all are over old,/ Of good
things none are
good enough;-/ We 'll show that we can help to frame/ A world of other
stuff./ Rob Roy's Grave. Wordsworth.
LLNE 10.327 16 Anciently, society was in the course of
things.
LLNE 10.355 23 ...the men of science, art, intellect,
are pretty sure to
degenerate into selfish housekeepers, dependent on wine, coffee,
furnace-heat, gas-light and fine furniture. Then instantly things swing
the other
way...
LLNE 10.359 4 Housekeepers say, There are a thousand
things to
everything...
EzRy 10.393 19 An eminent skill [Ezra Ripley] had in
saying difficult and
unspeakable things;...
EzRy 10.394 20 This intimate knowledge of
families...and still more, his
sympathy, made [Ezra Ripley] incomparable...in his exhortations and
prayers. He...said on the instant the best things in the world.
MMEm 10.414 4 ...[Mary Moody Emerson] writes...I
remember with great
satisfaction that from all the ills suffered, in childhood...I felt
that it was
rather the order of things...
MMEm 10.418 5 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.
MMEm 10.427 16 ...if it were in the nature of things
possible He could
withdraw himself,-I [Mary Moody Emerson] would hold on to the faith
that, at some moment of His existence, I was present...
Thor 10.457 13 ...a young girl...sharply asked
[Thoreau], Whether his
lecture would be a nice, interesting story...or whether it was one of
those
old philosophical things that she did not care about.
Thor 10.463 18 [Thoreau] said...Nature knows very well
what sounds are
worth attending to, and has made up her mind not to hear the
railroad-whistle. But things respect the devout mind, and a mental
ecstasy was never
interrupted.
Thor 10.472 4 [Thoreau's] intimacy with animals
suggested what Thomas
Fuller records of Butler the apiologist, that either he had told the
bees
things or the bees had told him.
Thor 10.479 5 The habit of a realist to find things the
reverse of their
appearance inclined [Thoreau] to put every statement in a paradox.
Thor 10.483 24 Of what significance the things you can
forget?
Carl 10.490 2 [Carlyle] talks like a very unhappy
man...displeased and
hindered by all men and things about him...
Carl 10.492 6 [Young men] go for free institutions, for
letting things
alone...[Carlyle] for stringent government...
Carl 10.497 13 [Carlyle] thinks it the only question
for wise men, instead
of art and fine fancies and poetry and such things, to address
themselves to
the problem of society.
LS 11.15 25 ...it does not appear that the opinion of
St. Paul, all things
considered, ought to alter our opinion derived from the Evangelists
[concerning the Lord's Supper].
HDC 11.40 12 [The Concord settler's pastor said] If we
look to number, we
are the fewest;...if to wealth and riches, we are the poorest of all
the people
of God through the whole world. We cannot excel nor so much as equal
other people in these things;...
HDC 11.43 24 What could the body of freemen, meeting
four times a year, at Boston, do for the daily wants of the planters at
Musketaquid? The wolf
was to be killed;...town and farm lines to be run. These things must be
done, govern who might.
HDC 11.44 19 In 1635, the [General] Court say, whereas
particular towns
have many things which concern only themselves, it is Ordered, that the
freemen of every town shall have power to dispose of their own lands
and
woods, and choose their own particular officers.
HDC 11.52 18 ...said [Tahattawan], all the time you
have lived after the
Indian fashion, under the power of the higher sachems, what did they
care
for you? They took away your skins, your kettles and your wampum...and
this was all they regarded. But you may see the English mind no such
things...
HDC 11.61 20 When the Dutch, or the French, or the
English royalist
disagreed with the [Massachusetts Bay] Colony, there was always found a
Dutch, or French, or tory party,-an earnest minority,-to keep things
from
extremity.
HDC 11.83 24 [The Concord Town Records] exhibit a
pleasing picture of a
community...where no man has much time for words, in his search after
things;...
LVB 11.96 2 However feeble the sufferer and however
great the oppressor, it is in the nature of things that the blow should
recoil upon the aggressor.
EWI 11.104 2 We sympathize very tenderly here with the
poor aggrieved [West Indian] planter, of whom so many unpleasant things
are said;...
EWI 11.104 14 ...if we saw the runaways hunted with
bloodhounds into
swamps and hills; and, in cases of passion, a planter throwing his
negro into
a copper of boiling cane-juice,-if we saw these things with eyes, we
too
should wince.
EWI 11.105 6 It became plain to all men, the more this
business was
looked into, that the crimes and cruelties of the slave-traders and
slave-owners
could not be overstated. The more it was searched, the more
shocking anecdotes came up,-things not to be spoken.
EWI 11.108 14 [Thomas Clarkson] began to ask himself if
these things [facts about slavery in the West Indies] could be true;
and if they were, he
could no longer rest.
EWI 11.126 7 It was very easy for manufacturers...to
see that if the state of
things in the islands [of the West Indies] was altered, if the slaves
had
wages, the slaves would be clothed, would build houses...
EWI 11.133 5 ...I am loath to say harsh things...
EWI 11.133 21 It is so easy to omit to speak, or even
to be absent when
delicate things are to be handled.
EWI 11.139 18 The tendency of things runs steadily to
this point, namely, to put every man on his merits...
EWI 11.139 24 The tendency of things runs steadily to
this point, namely... to give [every man] so much power as he naturally
exerts,-no more, no
less. Of course, the timid and base persons...who owe all their place
to the
opportunities which the older order of things allowed them, to deceive
and
defraud men, shudder at the change...
EWI 11.147 24 The sentiment of Right...pronounces
Freedom. The Power
that built this fabric of things affirms it in the heart;...
War 11.151 9 Looked at in this general and historical
way, many things
wear a very different face from that they show near by, and one at a
time...
War 11.160 11 [The human race] have nearly exhausted
all the good and
all the evil of this [first brutish] form: they have held as fast to
this
degradation as their worst enemy could desire; but all things have an
end, and so has this.
War 11.165 15 We surround ourselves always...with true
images of
ourselves in things...
War 11.166 10 ...the least change in the man will
change his
circumstances;...if, for example, he...should come to feel that every
man
was another self with whom he might come to join, as left hand works
with
right. Every degree of the ascendency of this feeling would cause the
most
striking changes of external things...
War 11.170 4 The question naturally arises, How is this
new aspiration of
the human mind [towards peace] to be made visible and real? How is it
to
pass out of thoughts into things?
FSLC 11.192 13 Sire, said the brave Orte, governor of
Bayonne, in his
letter...both [the inhabitants and soldiers] and I must humbly entreat
your
majesty to be pleased to employ your arms and lives in things that are
possible...
FSLC 11.201 21 [Webster] must learn...that the obscure
and private who
have no voice and care for none, so long as things go well...disown
him...
FSLC 11.202 25 [Webster] saw things as they were...
FSLN 11.221 21 I remember [Webster's] appearance at
Bunker's Hill. There was the Monument, and here was Webster. He knew
well that...he
was only to say plain and equal things,-grand things if he had them...
FSLN 11.221 23 I remember [Webster's] appearance at
Bunker's Hill. There was the Monument, and here was Webster. He knew
well that...he
was only to say plain and equal things,-grand things if he had them,
and, if he had them not, only to abstain from saying unfit things...
FSLN 11.222 12 In [Webster's] statement things lay in
daylight;...
FSLN 11.223 7 ...[Webster's] head distributed things in
their right places...
FSLN 11.225 11 Nobody doubts that there were good and
plausible things
to be said on the part of the South.
FSLN 11.231 20 There are two forces in Nature, by whose
antagonism we
exist;...the order of things...on the one hand,-and Will or Duty or
Freedom
on the other.
FSLN 11.234 16 These things show that no forms...are of
any use in
themselves.
FSLN 11.236 16 The insight of the religious sentiment
will disclose to [man] unexpected aids in the nature of things.
JBS 11.276 3 A man there came, whence none could tell,/
Bearing a
touchstone in his hand,/ And tested all things in the land/ By its
unerrring
spell./
TPar 11.291 25 ...every sound heart loves a responsible
person, one who
does not in generous company say generous things, and in mean company
base things...
TPar 11.291 26 ...every sound heart loves a responsible
person, one who
does not in generous company say generous things, and in mean company
base things...
ACiv 11.309 21 We want a state of things in which crime
shall not pay.
HCom 11.341 14 The old Greek Heraclitus said, War is
the Father of all
things.
SMC 11.348 11 These things are dear to every man that
lives,/ And life
prized more for what it lends than gives./
SMC 11.348 17 Yea, many a tie, through iteration
sweet,/ Strove to detain
their fatal feet;/ And yet the enduring half they chose,/ Whose choice
decides a man life's slave or king,/ The invisible things of God before
the
seen and known:/ Therefore their memory inspiration blows/ With echoes
gathering on from zone to zone;/...
SMC 11.352 13 ...in the necessities of the hour,
[Americans]...winked at a
practical exception to the Bill of Rights they had drawn up. They
winked at
the exception, believing it insignificant. But the moral law, the
nature of
things, did not wink at it...
SMC 11.354 11 The secret architecture of things begins
to disclose itself;...
SMC 11.354 12 The secret architecture of things begins
to disclose itself; the fact that all things were made on a basis of
right;...
SMC 11.354 15 ...opposition to [justice] is against the
nature of things;...
EdAd 11.382 4 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/...
EdAd 11.389 27 ...men of a solid genius are only
interested in substantial
things.
Wom 11.406 19 'T is [women's] mood and tone that is
important. Does
their mind misgive them, or are they firm and cheerful? 'T is a true
report
that things are going ill or well.
Wom 11.410 14 The spiritual force of man is as much
shown...in his fancy
and imagination,-attaching deep meanings to things and to arbitrary
inventions of no real value,-as in his perception of truth.
Wom 11.418 25 The answer that lies, silent or spoken,
in the minds of well-meaning
persons, to the new claims [of rights for women], is this: that
though their mathematical justice is not to be denied, yet the best
women do
not wish these things;...
Wom 11.423 10 As for the unsexing and contamination [of
women in
politics],-that only...shows...that our policies are...made up of
things not to
be spoken...
SHC 11.436 8 I have heard that death takes us away from
ill things, not
from good.
Humb 11.457 19 The wonderful Humboldt...marches an
army, gathering
all things as he goes.
CPL 11.498 13 [Peter Bulkeley said] If we look to
number, we are the
fewest;...if to wealth and riches, we are the poorest of all the people
of God
through the whole world. We cannot excel, nor so much as equal other
people in these things...
CPL 11.500 22 In a private letter to a lady, [Thoreau]
writes, Do you read
any noble verses? For my part, they have been the only things I
remembered...when all things else were blurred and defaced.
CPL 11.500 23 In a private letter to a lady, [Thoreau]
writes, Do you read
any noble verses? For my part, they have been the only things I
remembered...when all things else were blurred and defaced.
CPL 11.500 24 In a private letter to a lady, [Thoreau]
writes, Do you read
any noble verses? For my part, they have been the only things I
remembered...when all things else were blurred and defaced. All things
have put on mourning but they...
CPL 11.502 13 Thought is the most volatile of all
things.
CPL 11.507 24 In saying these things for books, I do
not for a moment
forget that they are secondary...
FRep 11.513 8 ...it is not...the whole magazine of
material nature that can
give the sum of power, but the infinite applicability of these
things...
FRep 11.517 7 The lodging the power in the people...has
the effect of
holding things closer to common sense;...
FRep 11.525 15 In each new threat of faction the ballot
has been, beyond
expectation, right and decisive. It is ever an inspiration...a sudden,
undated
perception of eternal right coming into and correcting things that were
wrong;...
FRep 11.541 2 We want a state of things in which crime
will not pay;...
FRep 11.541 3 We want...a state of things which allows
every man the
largest liberty compatible with the liberty of every other man.
NHI 12.2 4 Power that by obedience grows,/ Knowledge
that its source not
knows,/ Wave which severs whom it bears/ From the things which he
compares./
PLT 12.6 24 ...if [the student] finds at first with
some alarm how
impossible it is to accept many things which the hot or the mild
sectarian
may insist on his believing, he will be armed by his insight and brave
to
meet all inconvenience and all resistance it may cost him.
PLT 12.7 26 ...the course of things makes the scholars
either egotists or
worldly and jocose.
PLT 12.10 11 ...there is a certain beatitude...to which
all men are entitled... and to which their entrance must be in every
way forwarded. Practical
men...cannot arrive at this. Something very different has to be
done,-the
resisting this conspiracy of men and material things...
PLT 12.20 7 Not only man puts things in a row, but
things below in a row.
PLT 12.20 8 Not only man puts things in a row, but
things below in a row.
PLT 12.29 26 Every man is a new method and distributes
things anew.
PLT 12.31 20 [A man's aptitude] is...an organic
sympathy with the whole
frame of things.
PLT 12.33 17 The healthy mind...sees things in place...
PLT 12.40 10 The philosopher knows only laws. That is,
he considers a
purely mental fact, part of the soul itself. We say with Kenelm Digby,
All
things that she knoweth are herself, and she is all that she knoweth.
PLT 12.41 2 ...a thought, properly speaking,-that is a
truth held...because
we have perceived it is a fact in the nature of things...is of
inestimable value.
PLT 12.43 21 Genius is not a lazy angel contemplating
itself and things.
PLT 12.44 21 ...the fact of intellectual perception
severs once for all the
man from the things with which he converses.
PLT 12.44 26 If we converse with low things...we are
not compromised.
PLT 12.45 2 ...if [we converse] with high things...the
interval becomes a
gulf and we cannot enter into the highest good.
PLT 12.46 5 Wishing is castle-building; the dreaming
about things
agreeable to the senses, but to which we have no right.
PLT 12.47 25 We like people who can do things.
PLT 12.51 16 ...in learning one thing well you learn
all things.
PLT 12.55 25 The right partisan is a heady man, who,
because he does not
see many things, sees some one thing with heat and exaggeration;...
II 12.74 22 ...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 12.76 24 ...Number, Inspiration, Nature, Duty;-'t is
very certain that
these things have been hid as under towels and blankets, most part of
our
days...
II 12.79 19 All men are inspirable. Whilst they say
only the beautiful and
sacred words of necessity, there is no weakness, and no repentance. But
the
moment they attempt to say these things by memory, charlatanism begins.
II 12.83 6 The dream which lately floated before the
eyes of the French
nation-that every man shall do that which of all things he prefers, and
shall have three francs a day for doing that-is the real law of the
world;...
II 12.87 19 If immortality, in the sense in which you
seek it, is best, you
shall be immortal. If it is up to the dignity of that order of things
you know, it is secure.
II 12.89 2 The joy of knowledge, the late discovery
that the veil which hid
all things from him is really transparent...renew life for [a man].
Mem 12.90 11 ...[memory] is the cohesion which keeps
things from falling
into a lump...
Mem 12.100 16 ...if [Newton] was asked why things were
so or so, he
could find the reason on the spot.
Mem 12.105 1 We remember those things which we love and
those things
which we hate.
Mem 12.105 2 We remember those things which we love and
those things
which we hate.
Mem 12.107 18 Thoreau said, Of what significance are
the things you can
forget.
Mem 12.108 21 The divine is...the life that can well
bury the old in the
omnipotency with which it makes all things new.
CInt 12.114 24 Milton congratulates the Parliament
that, whilst London is
besieged and blocked...yet then are the people...more than at other
times
wholly taken up with the study of highest and most important matters to
be
reformed,-they reasoning, reading, inventing, discoursing, even to a
rarity
and admiration, things not before discoursed or written...
CInt 12.119 9 I delight in people who can do things.
CInt 12.129 6 Is...an insurance office, bank or bakery
outside of the system
and connection of things...
CL 12.166 25 ...[a parlor in which fine persons are
found] again is Nature, and there we have again the charm which
landscape gives us, in a finer
form; but the persons...must know what Pindar means when he says that
water is the best of things...
CL 12.167 8 ...as soon as man knows himself as
[Nature's] interpreter... then all things fly into place...
CW 12.174 12 In the arboretum you should have things
which are of a
solitary excellence...
MAng1 12.215 3 ...all things recorded of Michael Angelo
Buonarotti agree
together.
MAng1 12.218 26 ...certain minds, more closely
harmonized with Nature, possess the power of abstracting Beauty from
things...
MAng1 12.232 24 The things proposed to [Michelangelo]
in his
imagination were such that, for not being able with his hands to
express so
grand and terrible conceptions, he often abandoned his work.
Milt1 12.256 10 [Milton] declared that he who would
aspire to write well
hereafter in laudable things, ought himself to be a true poem;...
Milt1 12.256 12 [Milton] declared that he who would
aspire to write well
hereafter in laudable things, ought himself to be a true poem; a
composition
and pattern of the best and honorablest things...
Milt1 12.260 26 [Milton] uttered in [English] things
unheard before.
Milt1 12.262 6 ...[Milton] said...whose mind soever is
fully possessed with
a fervent desire to know good things, and with the dearest charity to
infuse
the knowledge of them into others, when such a man would speak, his
words...trip about him at command...
Milt1 12.263 25 [Milton says] Nor did Ceres, according
to the fable, ever
seek her daughter Proserpine with such unceasing solicitude as I have
sought this tou kalou idean, this perfect model of the beautiful in all
forms
and appearances of things.
Milt1 12.264 13 [Milton] states these things, he says,
to show that...a
certain reservedness of natural disposition and moral discipline...was
enough to keep him in disdain of far less incontinences that these that
had
been charged on him.
Milt1 12.273 20 [Milton] admonished his friend not to
admire military
prowess, or things in which force is of most avail.
Milt1 12.276 14 Like prophets, [Homer and Shakespeare]
seem but
imperfectly aware of the import of their own utterances. We hesitate to
say
such things...
Milt1 12.277 10 Milton, fired with dearest charity to
infuse the knowledge
of good things into others, tasked his giant imagination...for an end
beyond, namely, to teach.
Milt1 12.278 3 ...according to Lord Bacon's definition
of poetry...Poetry... seeks to accommodate the shows of things to the
desires of the mind...
ACri 12.283 3 Literature is but a poor trick...when it
busies itself to make
words pass for things;...
ACri 12.298 23 ...[Carlyle's History of Frederick II
is] a book...with new
heroes, things unvoiced before...
ACri 12.300 9 The power of the poet is...in measuring
his strength by the
facility with which he makes the mood of mind give its color to things.
ACri 12.302 12 [Channing] is the April day incarnated
and walking... painting all things its own color.
ACri 12.302 21 ...when we came, in the woods, to a
clump of goldenrod,- Ah! [Channing] says, here they are! these things
consume a great deal of
time. I don't know but they are of more importance than any other of
our
investments.
PD 12.307 3 The tongue is prone to lose the way;/ Not
so the pen, for in a
letter/ We have not better things to say,/ But surely say them better./
MLit 12.320 6 ...whilst every line of the true poet
will be genuine, he is in a
boundless power and freedom to say a million things.
MLit 12.320 9 ...the reason why [the true poet] can say
one thing well is
because his vision extends to the sight of all things...
MLit 12.321 21 ...[Shakespeare and Milton] are poets by
the free course
which they allow to the informing soul, which through their eyes
beholdeth
again and blesseth the things which it hath made.
MLit 12.323 11 ...since the earth as we said had become
a reading-room, the new opportunities seem to have...seconded
[Goethe's] sturdy
determination to see things for what they are.
MLit 12.330 11 The least inequality of mixture [of
Truth, Beauty and
Goodness], the excess of one element over the other, in that degree
diminishes the transparency of things...
WSL 12.343 1 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.
What
else are sanctities, and reforms, and all other things?
Pray 12.351 16 In the Phaedrus of Plato, we find this
petition in the mouth
of Socrates: O gracious Pan!...grant...that those external things which
I have
may be such as may best agree with a right internal disposition of
mine;...
AgMs 12.360 5 [Edmund Hosmer] had been reading the
report of the
Agricultural Survey of the Commonwealth, and had found good things in
it;...
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 12.377 27 [The Vivian Greys]...could write an
Iliad any rainy
morning, if fame were not such a bore. Men, women, though the greatest
and fairest, are stupid things;...
PPr 12.382 1 As we recall the topics [in Carlyle's Past
and Present], we are
struck with the force given to the plain truths;... These things strike
us with
a force which reminds us of the morals of the Oriental or early Greek
masters...
PPr 12.382 4 As we recall the topics [in Carlyle's Past
and Present], we are
struck with the force given to the plain truths;... These things strike
us with
a force which reminds us of the morals of the Oriental or early Greek
masters, and of no modern book. Truly in these things is great reward.
Let 12.395 18 We do a great many selfish things every
day;...
Let 12.398 17 ...[American youths] are educated above
the work of their
times and country, and disdain it. Many of the more acute minds pass
into a
lofty criticism of these things...
Trag 12.405 7 I do not know but the prevalent hue of
things to the eye of
leisure is melancholy.
Trag 12.409 8 A low, haggard sprite sits by our
side...a power of the
imagination to dislocate things orderly and cheerful and show them in
startling array.
Trag 12.410 11 [Sorrow] is superficial; for the most
part fantastic, or in the
appearance and not in things.
Trag 12.411 21 A man should not commit his tranquillity
to things...
Things, n. (1)
NR 3.245 14 ...Things are, and are not, at the same
time;...
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© 2005 by Charlotte York Irey
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