Pearls of ThoughtLitres, 15 Mei 2022 |
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Halaman
... The difference between coarse and refined abuse is as the difference between being bruised by a club and wounded by a poisoned arrow. —Johnson. Accident.– What reason, like the careful ant, draws laboriously together, A ...
... The difference between coarse and refined abuse is as the difference between being bruised by a club and wounded by a poisoned arrow. —Johnson. Accident.– What reason, like the careful ant, draws laboriously together, A ...
Halaman
Maturin Ballou. Accident.– What reason, like the careful ant, draws laboriously together, the wind of accident collects in one brief moment. —Schiller. What men call accident is God's own part. —P. J. Bailey. Acquirements.– Every noble ...
Maturin Ballou. Accident.– What reason, like the careful ant, draws laboriously together, the wind of accident collects in one brief moment. —Schiller. What men call accident is God's own part. —P. J. Bailey. Acquirements.– Every noble ...
Halaman
... reason is often good, not because it is conclusive, but because it is dramatic, – because it has the stamp of him who urges it, and is drawn from his own resources. For there are arguments ex homine as well as ad hominem. —Joubert. If I ...
... reason is often good, not because it is conclusive, but because it is dramatic, – because it has the stamp of him who urges it, and is drawn from his own resources. For there are arguments ex homine as well as ad hominem. —Joubert. If I ...
Halaman
... reason wills our hearts should be as good. —Shakespeare. Art.– Rules may teach us not to raise the arms above the head; but if passion carries them, it will be well done: passion knows more than art. —Baron. It is a great mortification ...
... reason wills our hearts should be as good. —Shakespeare. Art.– Rules may teach us not to raise the arms above the head; but if passion carries them, it will be well done: passion knows more than art. —Baron. It is a great mortification ...
Halaman
... Reasons of things are rather to be taken by weight than tale. —Jeremy Collier. The world is ruled by the subordinates, not by their chiefs. —Charles Buxton. Authors.– Authors may be divided into falling stars, planets, and.
... Reasons of things are rather to be taken by weight than tale. —Jeremy Collier. The world is ruled by the subordinates, not by their chiefs. —Charles Buxton. Authors.– Authors may be divided into falling stars, planets, and.
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Istilah dan frasa umum
action Addison Alfred de Musset Arsène Houssaye Bacon beautiful Beecher better Bulwer BulwerLytton Burke Byron Carlyle Chapin Charles Buxton Coleridge Colton death divine Douglas Jerrold Dryden earth Emerson everything evil eyes fear feel Feltham flowers fools fortune friends genius George Eliot George Herbert George MacDonald give Goethe Goldsmith hand happiness hath heart heaven Heinrich Heine honor hope human imagination Jeremy Collier Jeremy Taylor Johnson Joubert knowledge labor Lamartine light live look Lytton Macaulay Madame Swetchine man's mankind Mazzini Milton mind Montaigne moral nature never noble P. J. Bailey pain passions Petit Senn pleasure poet poetry Pope reason religion Richter ruin Ruskin Samuel Smiles sense Shakespeare sorrow soul Spurgeon sweet Sydney Smith tears Tennyson things Thoreau thou thought today true truth Victor Hugo virtue Voltaire wisdom wise woman words