Meditations Among the Tombs: In a Letter to a Lady |
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Page 10
... Fear ! Oh ! that they were wife * ! said the in . spired Penman . It was his laft Wish for his dear People : He breathed it out , and gave up the Ghost . But what is Wisdom ? It confifts not in refined Speculations , accu- rate ...
... Fear ! Oh ! that they were wife * ! said the in . spired Penman . It was his laft Wish for his dear People : He breathed it out , and gave up the Ghost . But what is Wisdom ? It confifts not in refined Speculations , accu- rate ...
Page 19
... Earth . And what Reafon have I " to suppose , that the precious Soul is in a better Condition ? May I not justly fear , " that , fentenced by the righteous Judge , D 2 " it 杯 " it is going , or gone away , into among the TOMBS . 19.
... Earth . And what Reafon have I " to suppose , that the precious Soul is in a better Condition ? May I not justly fear , " that , fentenced by the righteous Judge , D 2 " it 杯 " it is going , or gone away , into among the TOMBS . 19.
Page 49
... fear in these quiet Chambers : " Here even the Wicked cease from troubling . " GOOD Heavens ! what a folemn Scene ! How dismal the Gloom ! Here is perpetual Darkness , and Night even at Noon - day . How doleful the Solitude ! Not one H ...
... fear in these quiet Chambers : " Here even the Wicked cease from troubling . " GOOD Heavens ! what a folemn Scene ! How dismal the Gloom ! Here is perpetual Darkness , and Night even at Noon - day . How doleful the Solitude ! Not one H ...
Page 50
... meaner Corpfes , without much Ce- remony , go down to the Stones of the Pit . " My Apprehenfions recover from their Surprize : I find , here are no Phantoms , 5 but but fuch as Fear raises . --- However , it 50 MEDITATIONS.
... meaner Corpfes , without much Ce- remony , go down to the Stones of the Pit . " My Apprehenfions recover from their Surprize : I find , here are no Phantoms , 5 but but fuch as Fear raises . --- However , it 50 MEDITATIONS.
Page 51
In a Letter to a Lady James Hervey. but fuch as Fear raises . --- However , it ftill amazes me , to obferve the Wonders of this nether World . Those who received vaft Revenues , and called whole Lordships their own , are here ' reduced ...
In a Letter to a Lady James Hervey. but fuch as Fear raises . --- However , it ftill amazes me , to obferve the Wonders of this nether World . Those who received vaft Revenues , and called whole Lordships their own , are here ' reduced ...
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Popular passages
Page 5 - But will God indeed dwell on the earth? behold, the heaven and heaven of heavens cannot contain thee; how much less this house that I have builded?
Page 25 - For the Son of man is as a man taking a far journey, who left his house, and gave authority to his servants, and to every man his work, and commanded the porter to watch.
Page 51 - Such a nation might truly say to corruption, thou art my father, and to the worm, thou art my mother and my sister.
Page 67 - Behold, the nations are as a drop of a bucket, and are counted as the small dust of the balance : behold, He taketh up the isles as a very little thing.
Page 77 - To consider further this double end in the works of Nature, and how they are at the same time both useful and entertaining, we find that the most important parts in the vegetable world are those which are the most beautiful.
Page 74 - So much of eternity is gone;" for when millions of centuries are elapsed, it is but just commencing; and, when millions more have run their ample round, it will be no nearer ending. Yea, when ages, numerous as the bloom of spring, increased by the herbage of summer, both augmented by the leaves of autumn, and all multiplied by the drops of rain which drown the winter — when these, and ten thousand times ten thousand more...
Page 15 - Name : which were born, not of blood, nor of the will of the flefh, nor of the will of man, but of God.
Page 55 - In a grove of tulips, or a knot of pinks, one perceives a difference in almost every individual. Scarce any two are turned and tinctured exactly alike. Each allows himself a little particularity in his dress, though all belong to one family : so that they are various, and yet the same.
Page 45 - Cornwall ; and his temper and affections so public, that no accident which happened could make any impressions in him ; and his example kept others from taking any thing ill, or at least seeming to do so. In a word, a brighter courage, and a gentler disposition, were never married together to make the most cheerful and innocent conversation.
Page 14 - Tis written, indeed, of its suffering Saviour, that when He had tasted the vinegar mingled with gall, He would not drink. And did our new-come stranger begin to sip the cup of life : but, perceiving the bitterness, turn away its head, and refuse the draught ? Was this the cause, why the wary babe only opened its eyes : just looked on the light : and then withdrew into the more inviting regions of undisturbed repose?