Dictionary of Quotations from Ancient and Modern, English and Foreign Sources. Rev. James Wood

Dictionary of Quotations from Ancient and Modern, English and Foreign Sources - Rev. James Wood


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to struggle from the littleness and obstruction of an actual world into the freedom and infinitude of an ideal. Carlyle.

      Every power of both heaven and earth is friendly to a noble and courageous activity. J. Burroughs.

      Every production of genius must be the production of enthusiasm. Disraeli.

      Every race has its own habitat. Knox.

      Every reader reads himself out of the book 55 that he reads. Goethe.

      Every real master of speaking or writing uses his personality as he would any other serviceable material. Holmes.

      Every real need is appeased and every vice stimulated by satisfaction. Amiel.

      Every rightly constituted mind ought to rejoice, not so much in knowing anything clearly, as in feeling that there is infinitely more which it cannot know. Ruskin.

      Every rose has its thorn. Pr.

      Every scripture is to be interpreted by the 60 same spirit which gave it forth. Quoted by Emerson.

      Every sect, as far as reason will help it, gladly uses it; when it fails them, they cry out it is matter of faith, and above reason. Locke.

      Every shadow points to the sun. Emerson.

      Every ship is a romantic object except that we sail in. Emerson.

      Every shoe fits not every foot. Pr.

      Every shot does not bring down a bird. Dut. Pr.

      Every soo (sow) to its ain trough. Sc. Pr.

      Every species of activity is met by a negation. 5 Goethe.

      Every spirit builds itself a house, and beyond its house a world, and beyond its world a heaven. Emerson.

      Every spirit makes its house, but afterwards the house confines the spirit. Emerson.

      Every step of life shows how much caution is required. Goethe.

      Every step of progress which the world has made has been from scaffold to scaffold and from stake to stake. Wendell Phillips.

      Every Stoic was a Stoic, but in Christendom 10 where is the Christian? Emerson.

      Every style formed elaborately on any model must be affected and strait-laced. Whipple.

      Every subject's duty is the king's, but every subject's soul is his own. Hen. V., iv. 1.

      Every tear of sorrow sown by the righteous springs up a pearl. Matthew Henry.

      Everything a man parts with is the cost of something. Everything he receives is the compensation of something. J. G. Holland.

      Everything calls for interest, only it must be 15 an interest divested of self-interest and sincere. Desjardins.

      Everything comes if a man will only wait. Disraeli.

      Everything, even piety, is dangerous in a man without judgment. Stanislaus.

      Everything good in a man thrives best when properly recognised. J. G. Holland.

      Everything good in man leans on what is higher. Emerson.

      Everything good is on the highway. Emerson. 20

      Everything great is not always good, but all good things are great. Demosthenes.

      Everything holy is before what is unholy; guilt presupposes innocence, not the reverse; angels, but not fallen ones, were created. Jean Paul.

      Everything in life, to be of value, must have a sequence. Goethe.

      Everything in nature contains all the powers of nature. Everything is made of one hidden stuff. Emerson.

      Everything in nature goes by law, and not by 25 luck. Emerson.

      Everything in nature has a positive and a negative pole. Emerson.

      Everything in nature is a puzzle until it finds its solution in man, who solves it in some way with God, and so completes the circle of creation. T. T. Munger.

      Everything in the world can be borne except a long succession of beautiful days. Goethe.

      Everything in this world depends upon will. Disraeli.

      Everything in this world is a tangled yarn; 30 we taste nothing in its purity; we do not remain two moments in the same state. Rousseau.

      Everything is as you take it. Pr.

      Everything is beautiful, seen from the point of the intellect; but all is sour if seen as experience. Emerson.

      Everything is good as it comes from the hands of the Creator; everything degenerates in the hands of man. Rousseau.

      Everything is mere opinion. M. Aurelius.

      Everything is sold to skill and labour. Hume. 35

      Everything is sweetened by risk. A. Smith.

      Everything is what it is, and not another thing. Bishop Butler.

      Everything is worth the money that can be got for it. Pub. Syr.

      Everything looks easy that is practised to perfection. Goethe.

      Everything rises but to fall, and increases but 40 to decay. Sall.

      Everything runs to excess; every good quality is noxious if unmixed; and to carry the danger to the edge of ruin, Nature causes each man's peculiarity to superabound. Emerson.

      Everything springs into being and passes away according to law, yet how fluctuating is the lot that presides over the life which is to us so priceless. Goethe.

      Everything that exceeds the bounds of moderation has an unstable foundation. Sen.

      Everything that happens, happens of necessity. Schopenhauer.

      Everything that happens in this world is part 45 of a great plan of God running through all time. Ward Beecher.

      Everything that happens to us leaves some trace behind it, and everything insensibly contributes to make us what we are. Goethe.

      Everything that is exquisite hides itself. J. Roux.

      Everything that is popular deserves the attention of the philosopher; although it may not be of any worth in itself, yet it characterises the people. Emerson.

      Everything that looks to the future elevates human nature; for never is life so low as when occupied with the present. Landor.

      Everything that tends to emancipate us from 50 external restraint without adding to our own power of self-government is mischievous.


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