Guide to Social Happiness |
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Page 97
... speak for themselves , almost exclusively from the impulse of the moment , they can only speak of love in the colloquial language of the day , which lan- guage changing with the tastes and fash- ions of the world , that of Shakespeare's ...
... speak for themselves , almost exclusively from the impulse of the moment , they can only speak of love in the colloquial language of the day , which lan- guage changing with the tastes and fash- ions of the world , that of Shakespeare's ...
Page 183
... speak of ennobling or exalting the human mind , it is but in other words to speak of increasing its capability of enjoying that which is supremely excellent . Our na- tural desire of enjoyment , is the principle upon which we teach all ...
... speak of ennobling or exalting the human mind , it is but in other words to speak of increasing its capability of enjoying that which is supremely excellent . Our na- tural desire of enjoyment , is the principle upon which we teach all ...
Page 15
... speak , and to speak urgently - to speak kindly too , as brothers or sisters in weakness , and fel- low travellers on the same path - the time to speak with prayer and supplication - to speak with the Bible in our hands , the eye of a ...
... speak , and to speak urgently - to speak kindly too , as brothers or sisters in weakness , and fel- low travellers on the same path - the time to speak with prayer and supplication - to speak with the Bible in our hands , the eye of a ...
Contents
THE HALL AND THE COTTAGE | 7 |
ELLEN EKSDALE 68 | 68 |
THE CURATES WIDOW 83 | 83 |
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abstinence admiration affection Agnes Alice amongst Andrew Miller Arnold associations beauty behold better birds blessing bright brow called character charm child choly cival colour comfort consola countenance creatures dark deep delight duty earth enjoyment Eskdale evil exis feeling felt flowers habits hand happiness heard heart heaven hope hour human idea imagination innu intel kind Lady Forbes Langley less light listen live look Lord Lord Byron Mary melan melancholy ment mind ministers of religion misanthrope moral morning mother nature ness never night object pain passions picture pleasure poet poetical poetry poor racter scene silent smile society soul sound speak spirit sublime suffering sweet tain taste tears tell tence tenderness thee thing thou thought timately tion truth turned uncon voice walk wandering weary William Clare woman words young