Heart of Man, and Other PapersHarcourt, Brace and Howe, 1920 - 323 Seiten |
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Seite 6
George Edward Woodberry. these hilltops , I know , mists will drift and touch all day ; and often they darken threateningly , and creep softly down the slopes , and fill the next - lying valley , and roll , and lift again , and reveal ...
George Edward Woodberry. these hilltops , I know , mists will drift and touch all day ; and often they darken threateningly , and creep softly down the slopes , and fill the next - lying valley , and roll , and lift again , and reveal ...
Seite 68
... touch of weakness in an angel , some touch of pity in a devil , some unmerited misfortune in an Ariel , bring them home to our bosoms ; just as the frailty of the hero , however great he be , humanizes him at a stroke . Thus these ...
... touch of weakness in an angel , some touch of pity in a devil , some unmerited misfortune in an Ariel , bring them home to our bosoms ; just as the frailty of the hero , however great he be , humanizes him at a stroke . Thus these ...
Seite 78
... of its discovery . In literature this moment of discovery is what makes that flash which is sometimes called intuition , and is one of the great charms of genius . The concrete nature of ideal art , to touch conveniently 78 HEART OF MAN.
... of its discovery . In literature this moment of discovery is what makes that flash which is sometimes called intuition , and is one of the great charms of genius . The concrete nature of ideal art , to touch conveniently 78 HEART OF MAN.
Seite 79
George Edward Woodberry. The concrete nature of ideal art , to touch conveniently here upon a related though minor topic , is also the reason that it expresses more than its creator is aware of . In imaging life he includes more reality ...
George Edward Woodberry. The concrete nature of ideal art , to touch conveniently here upon a related though minor topic , is also the reason that it expresses more than its creator is aware of . In imaging life he includes more reality ...
Seite 80
... touch of humor inseparable from the spectacle of beasts playing at being men ; but the very fact that the moral is of men and the tale is of beasts involves a separation of the truth from its concrete embodiment , and besides the moral ...
... touch of humor inseparable from the spectacle of beasts playing at being men ; but the very fact that the moral is of men and the tale is of beasts involves a separation of the truth from its concrete embodiment , and besides the moral ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
action Andromachus artist beauty become belongs character Christian civilization common concrete Cornelius Severus criticism dead past democracy divine earth element embodied emotion English enters epic Etna experience expression external fact faculty Faerie Queene faith feeling felt genius George Eliot Greek Grolier Club habit hand heart heaven ideal ideal art ideas imagination immortal individual intellectual justice knowledge Letojanni light literature lives man's mankind mass material matter means memory ment method mind mood moral mystery nations noble ourselves passion past personality Phillips physical Plato plot Plutarch poet political principle race re-create reality realize reason religious romantic romanticism Saracens seems sense Shakespeare Sicily social society soul soul's sphere spirit Taormina Taorminian things thought Timoleon tion Toussaint L'Ouverture tradition true truth ture universal Virgil virtue vital Wendell Phillips whole wisdom words world of art youth
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 322 - baptismal night. I wish I might dip you in these spiritual waters. It is nothing that we are humble; the humblest life may be a life of sacrifice, and the poorer it is, generally, the greater is the sacrifice. Light is the same in the sun and in the candle. "How far that little candle throws its beams! So shines a good deed in a
Seite 238 - Adam Smith contributed more, by the publication of this single work, towards the happiness of men than has been effected by the united abilities of all the statesmen and legislators of whom history has preserved an authentic account.
Seite 124 - fearfully yet exactly described in the Apostle's words, 'having no hope and without God in the world,' — all this is a vision to dizzy and appall; and inflicts upon the mind the sense of a profound mystery which is absolutely beyond human solution.
Seite 322 - the aim of the foe. Death is not the worst of life. Defeat is not the worst of failures. Not to have tried is the true failure. Above all, do not draw back because everything is not plain, and you may, perhaps, be mistaken; obscurity is always the air of the present hour; "at the evening time,
Seite 308 - remembered it because the words were almost identical with Lowell's. "I am impatient," he said at Birmingham, "of being told that property is entitled to exceptional consideration because it bears all the burdens of the state. It bears those, indeed, which can most easily be borne, but poverty pays with its person the chief expenses of war, pestilence, and famine.
Seite 313 - is money against legislation. My friends, you and I shall be in our graves long before that battle is ended; and unless our children have more patience and courage than saved this country from slavery, republican institutions will go down before moneyed corporations.
Seite 4 - The intention of the author was to illustrate how poetry, politics, and religion are the flowering of the same human spirit, and have their feeding roots in a common soil, "deep in the general heart of men.
Seite 306 - he liked to mask his wisdom in a distinguished name, often said: "We are well aware that the privileges of the people, the rights of free
Seite 301 - Despotism looks down into the poor man's cradle, and knows it can crush resistance and curb ill-will. Democracy sees the ballot in that baby-hand;
Seite 124 - and inflicts upon the mind the sense of a profound mystery which is absolutely beyond human solution.