Essays, First SeriesJohn B. Alden, 1886 - 343 pages |
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Page 31
... sensual people . They cannot unite him to history , or reconcile him with themselves . As they come to revere their in- tuitions and aspire to live holily , their own piety explains every fact , every word . How easily these old ...
... sensual people . They cannot unite him to history , or reconcile him with themselves . As they come to revere their in- tuitions and aspire to live holily , their own piety explains every fact , every word . How easily these old ...
Page 38
... sensual . Lucy Ashton is an- other name for fidelity , which is always beautiful and always liable to calamity in this world . - But along with the civil and metaphysical his- tory of man , another history goes daily forward , - that of ...
... sensual . Lucy Ashton is an- other name for fidelity , which is always beautiful and always liable to calamity in this world . - But along with the civil and metaphysical his- tory of man , another history goes daily forward , - that of ...
Page 39
... sensual . Lucy Ashton is an- other name for fidelity , which is always beautiful and always liable to calamity in this world . - - But along with the civil and metaphysical his- tory of man , another history goes daily forward , that of ...
... sensual . Lucy Ashton is an- other name for fidelity , which is always beautiful and always liable to calamity in this world . - - But along with the civil and metaphysical his- tory of man , another history goes daily forward , that of ...
Page 100
... sensual bright , etc. , from the moral sweet how to detach the sensual sweet , the sensual strong , 100 COMPENSATION .
... sensual bright , etc. , from the moral sweet how to detach the sensual sweet , the sensual strong , 100 COMPENSATION .
Page 101
Ralph Waldo Emerson. the sensual bright , etc. , from the moral sweet , the moral deep , the moral fair ; that is , again , to con- trive to cut clean off this upper surface so thin as to leave it bottomless ; to get a one end , without ...
Ralph Waldo Emerson. the sensual bright , etc. , from the moral sweet , the moral deep , the moral fair ; that is , again , to con- trive to cut clean off this upper surface so thin as to leave it bottomless ; to get a one end , without ...
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