Old Pictures of Life, Volumen2Stone and Kimball, 1894 |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 24
Página 6
... thing , regardless of any principles the despot might rep- resent . By the close of the fifth cen- tury that mental realm which had been powerful and beautiful from Homer to Tacitus had passed beneath the surface . A spiritual Atlantis ...
... thing , regardless of any principles the despot might rep- resent . By the close of the fifth cen- tury that mental realm which had been powerful and beautiful from Homer to Tacitus had passed beneath the surface . A spiritual Atlantis ...
Página 8
... things , were themes much better for logical practice than were any of the inquiries which might be raised in the department of utility . For Christ to be born in such an age was something of a misfortune , for the great thinkers took ...
... things , were themes much better for logical practice than were any of the inquiries which might be raised in the department of utility . For Christ to be born in such an age was something of a misfortune , for the great thinkers took ...
Página 9
... thing apprehending must not be apart from the thing apprehended ; that the spirit of man must have everything within itself ; that intuition is the path to knowledge THE SUBMERGED CENTURIES . 9.
... thing apprehending must not be apart from the thing apprehended ; that the spirit of man must have everything within itself ; that intuition is the path to knowledge THE SUBMERGED CENTURIES . 9.
Página 10
... things when neither of the things can be understood . The first mental faculty to fall into ruin was the reasoning power . The classic lands had created a race of logicians who can now be compared to the great mod- erns , such as Burke ...
... things when neither of the things can be understood . The first mental faculty to fall into ruin was the reasoning power . The classic lands had created a race of logicians who can now be compared to the great mod- erns , such as Burke ...
Página 15
... the flesh , to which the soul must not be given over to be ener- vated , doth often beguile me , the sense not so waiting upon reason as patiently to But follow her . In these things I sin una- wares THE SUBMERGED CENTURIES . 15.
... the flesh , to which the soul must not be given over to be ener- vated , doth often beguile me , the sense not so waiting upon reason as patiently to But follow her . In these things I sin una- wares THE SUBMERGED CENTURIES . 15.
Términos y frases comunes
Anakreon animal asks Atala Bacon barge Beatrice beautiful became become bird blossoms brute world Cæsar called Capulet century charming Chateaubriand Christian Cicero classic color Dante death Demosthenes despot earth excess father feel flowers friendship genius girl gold Goths gray squirrel Greek happiness heart heaven Homer hundred injured intellectual Julius Cæsar land language Latin lawyer Linda literature lived Lord Bacon Louis lover Macedon Madame Recamier man's mental millions mind moral mountain nation nature night nightingale novel orator pagan palace passed path Petrarch Plotinus poem poet poetry reach religion rich river Roman Rome Romeo and Juliet saint scenes scholar sentiment Shakespeare sing song soul story sweet Tacitus taught theology things thou thought thousand tion TRUE LOVE STORY truth Verona vice vine Virgil wild woman wonderful woods words write young