Edge-tools of Speech, Selected and Arranged....Houghton, 1899 - 579 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 100
Página 9
... everything that's old , old friends , old times , old manners , old books , old wine . Goldsmith . Age , when it does not harden the heart and sour the temper , naturally returns to the milky disposition of infancy . Time has the same ...
... everything that's old , old friends , old times , old manners , old books , old wine . Goldsmith . Age , when it does not harden the heart and sour the temper , naturally returns to the milky disposition of infancy . Time has the same ...
Página 16
... Everything appertaining to the angler's art is cowardly , cruel , treacherous , and cat - like.- Chatfield . Idle time not idly spent . - Sir Henry Wotton . We really cannot see what equanimity there is in jerking a lacerated carp out ...
... Everything appertaining to the angler's art is cowardly , cruel , treacherous , and cat - like.- Chatfield . Idle time not idly spent . - Sir Henry Wotton . We really cannot see what equanimity there is in jerking a lacerated carp out ...
Página 32
... everything . - Publius Syrus . It is not the nature of avarice to be satisfied with anything but money . Every passion that acts upon mankind has a peculiar mode of oper- ation . Many of them are temporary and fluctu- ating ; they admit ...
... everything . - Publius Syrus . It is not the nature of avarice to be satisfied with anything but money . Every passion that acts upon mankind has a peculiar mode of oper- ation . Many of them are temporary and fluctu- ating ; they admit ...
Página 39
... everything from a moral point of view and you will end by believing in God . - Dr. T. Arnold . - Belief is not a matter of choice , but of con- viction . — R. G. Ingersoll . Ungraciousness in rendering a benefit , like a hoarse voice ...
... everything from a moral point of view and you will end by believing in God . - Dr. T. Arnold . - Belief is not a matter of choice , but of con- viction . — R. G. Ingersoll . Ungraciousness in rendering a benefit , like a hoarse voice ...
Página 42
... everything else in our language should perish , would alone suffice to show the whole extent of its beauty and power . Macaulay . Thus I clothe my native villany with old odd ends , stolen forth of holy writ . -Shakspeare . - A stream ...
... everything else in our language should perish , would alone suffice to show the whole extent of its beauty and power . Macaulay . Thus I clothe my native villany with old odd ends , stolen forth of holy writ . -Shakspeare . - A stream ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todo
Términos y frases comunes
Addison Bacon Beaconsfield beauty Beecher Ben Jonson Bovée Bulwer-Lytton Burke Byron Carlyle Cicero Coleridge Colton death divine doth Douglas Jerrold Dryden earth Emerson eternal evil eyes fear flowers fool genius George Eliot George Herbert George Macdonald give Goethe Goldsmith grace H. W. Shaw happiness hath heart heaven Horace Hosea Ballou human J. G. Holland Jeremy Taylor Johnson Joubert Lamartine Lavater live Longfellow Lord Lowell Macaulay man's mankind Marie Ebner-Eschenbach Milton mind moral N. P. Willis Nature never pain passion Petit-Senn pleasure poetry Pope pride reason religion Richter Rochefoucauld Samuel Smiles Schiller Seneca Shakspeare Sidney Sir Walter smile sorrow soul sweet Swetchine Swift tears Tennyson Thackeray thee things Thomas Thomas Fuller Thomas Paine Thoreau thou thought tion true truth vice Victor Hugo virtue Voltaire Whately wisdom wise woman women words Young youth