| Pliny (the Younger.) - 1893 - 512 pages
...There is no separation between our own souls and that Spirit in whom, in the most literal sense, we live and move and have our being, between the world...progress as in the exact movements of the planets. We are absorbed in the present, in its needs and woes, unaware that our whole past lives, our inheritance... | |
| Horatio Willis Dresser - 1897 - 160 pages
...There is no separation between our own souls and that Spirit in whom, in the most literal sense, we live and move and have our being, between the world...progress as in the exact movements of the planets. We are absorbed in the present, in its needs and woes, unaware that our whole past lives, our inheritance... | |
| David Scull - 1908 - 168 pages
...There is no separation between our own souls and that Spirit in whom, in the most literal sense, 'we live and move, and have our being,' — between the...the plant, and awakens to consciousness in man, is one great life. The sea, the sky, the mountains, trees, flowers, — all reveal God. All serious thinkers... | |
| John Rougier Cohu - 1912 - 276 pages
...intimate relation to all the rest. From star to atom, from animalcule to man, it throbs with life, a life which sleeps in the rock, dreams in the plant, and awakens to self-consciousness in man. Modern physical science, — from its constant habit of analysing, measuring... | |
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