Gold-foil, Hammered from Popular Proverbs

Capa
C.Scribner, 1860
 

Conteúdo

XVII
194
XVIII
205
XIX
215
XX
226
XXI
237
XXIII
260
XXIV
272
XXV
284

XIV
160
XV
171
XVI
183
XXVI
297
XXVII
309
XXVIII
347

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Página 307 - This, my judgment tells me, is admirable, and only this. Now Christianity never works its perfect work in the heart until the outgoings of that heart are of this character. I am not bound to admire, and I cannot admire, a man who, professing to be moved by Christian motives, manifests his life by deeds of benevolence that start in a sense of Christian duty and Christian obligation. The Christian life must be as uncalculating and as spontaneous as the natural life, before its expression can touch...
Página 89 - It draws the lines along which we may legitimately labor in the development of our powers. It reveals the relations which exist between material things and ourselves. Law is never to be ignored as an important part of the machinery by which its founder administers the world's great affairs, but we are never to shut God out of it, nor to shut him behind it. It is intended that we shall accomplish all through law that we can accomplish for ourselves — that we shall earn by the use of law all that...
Página 45 - ... go — into a cornfield, where she will do serious damage to the proprietor, and kill herself with over-eating. She comes up to the fence that she would fain demolish or surmount, and the new restraint vexes her beyond measure. Her companion in the field is an innocent, docile creature, that is content with her honest grass, and her honest way of getting it. So, while the thief stands raving and floundering at the fence, she fills herself with clover, and contentedly lies down to the pleasant...
Página 183 - You have dally to do with the Devil, and pretend to be frightened at a mouse." " Don't measure other people's corn by your own bushel." THERE is little in the conduct and condition of men that is not the subject of a false valuation; and I can imagine nothing, save larger hearts and more plentiful brains, that would be of so much use to the world as a catalogue of sins, arranged upon an intelligible scale, so that their comparative enormity might be settled at a glance. Such a catalogue might serve...
Página 266 - ... earth. Even the old barn, crazy in every timber and gaping at every joint, has charms for me. I try again the breathless leap from the great beams into the bay. I sit again on the threshold of the widely open doors — open to the soft south wind of spring — and watch the cattle, whose faces look half human to me, as they sun themselves, and peacefully ruminate, while, drop by drop, the dissolving snow upon the roof drills holes through the wasting drifts beneath the eaves, down into the
Página 124 - Heaven is waiting for you ! The whole machinery of the divine beneficence is clogged by your hard hearts and rigid fingers. Give and spend, and be sure that God will send ; for only in giving and spending do you fulfil the object of His sending, XI. THE LOVE OF WHAT IS OURS. "There is one good wife in the country, and every man thinks he hath her." "Every bird likes its own nest the best.
Página 223 - ... does not get it. It is well for every man, therefore, to have enemies, to hear what they say about him, and to experience the weight of their opposition. Enemies drive the soul home to its motives, rouse its finest energies, compact its character, render it watchful of the issues of its life, keep it strained up to its work, and help to eliminate from it selfish considerations. There hardly ever lived a reformer who might not have been strangled and silenced at the outset of his career by praise....
Página 34 - No ruffle of exultation swept over the bosom of that sublime patience, for even then he had only made a beginning ! He had only made a place for his creatures to dwell in. Before Him stretched almost infinite cycles of duration. In the far perspective, He saw nations rise and sink, civilizations blossom and decay, the advent and the mission of Jesus, the struggles of good and evil, of light and darkness, of truth and error ; and on the remote pinnacle of destiny, faintly rising to his eye in the...
Página 91 - Cent per cent, do we pay for every vicious indulgence." " If you pursue good with labor, the labor passes away, but the good remains ; if you pursue evil with pleasure, the pleasure passes away but the evil remains." " Virtue and happiness are mother and daughter." LIFE would appear to be a very dangerous sea, judging by the number of wrecks that strew its shores — more remarkably unsafe, perhaps, for pleasure yachts and such other fancy craft as may fail to maintain the proper relations between...
Página 30 - As she stands upon the rock worn smooth by her constant feet, and gazes hopefully across the saddening sea into the yellow sunset, to catch a glimpse of the long-expected sail, would it not be inhuman to plunder her of the keepsake and toss it into the waves, or tear from her the hope that fills with blood and breath the long perished object of her idolatry, and swells the phantom sails that are winging him to her bosom ? Whether true or false, the Bible is our all — the one regenerative, redemptive...

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