Heat to Hemispheres
A Concordance to the Collected Essays of Ralph Waldo Emerson
Compiled by Eugene F. Irey
heat, n. (94)
Nat 1.11 13 To a man laboring under calamity, the heat
of his own fire hath
sadness in it.
Nat 1.26 24 Light and darkness are our familiar
expression for knowledge
and ignorance; and heat for love.
Nat 1.28 20 The motion of the earth round its axis and
round the sun, makes the day and the year. These are certain amounts of
brute light and
heat.
Nat 1.44 5 The granite is differenced in its laws only
by the more or less of
heat from the river that wears it away.
Nat 1.44 9 ...the light resembles the heat which rides
with it through Space.
Nat 1.49 9 It is the uniform effect of culture on the
human mind, not to
shake our faith in the stability of particular phenomena, as of heat...
AmS 1.98 22 That great principle of Undulation in
nature, that shows
itself...in heat and cold;...is known to us under the name of
Polarity...
DSA 1.120 2 ...in the powers and path of light, heat,
attraction, and life, [the world] is well worth the pith and heart of
great men to subdue and
enjoy it.
DSA 1.124 6 ...[evil] is like cold, which is the
privation of heat.
MN 1.193 24 ...the sturdiest defender of existing
institutions feels the
terrific inflammability of this air which condenses heat in every
corner...
Tran 1.350 19 All that the brave Xanthus brings home
from his wars is the
recollection that at the storming of Samos, in the heat of the battle,
Pericles
smiled on me, and passed on to another detachment.
Tran 1.354 14 ...it will please us to reflect that
though we had few virtues
or consolations, we bore with our indigence, nor once strove to repair
it
with hypocrisy or false heat of any kind.
Hist 2.5 21 ...I can see my own vices without heat in
the distant persons of
Solomon, Alcibiades, and Catiline.
Comp 2.96 18 Polarity, or action and reaction, we meet
in every part of
nature;...in heat and cold;...
Chr1 3.95 10 [Character] is a natural power, like light
and heat...
Chr1 3.113 7 ...if suddenly we encounter a friend, we
pause; our heat and
hurry look foolish enough;...
Mrs1 3.137 18 ...coolness and absence of heat and haste
indicate fine
qualities.
Mrs1 3.139 11 The person who...converses with heat,
puts whole drawing-rooms
to flight.
Nat2 3.179 20 A little heat, that is a little motion,
is all that differences the... cold poles of the earth from the
prolific tropical climates.
Nat2 3.188 8 Each prophet comes presently...to esteem
his hat and shoes
sacred. However this may discredit such persons with the judicious, it
helps
them with the people, as it gives heat, pungency and publicity to their
words.
Pol1 3.197 20 When the Muses nine/ With the Virtues
meet,/ Find to their
design/ An Atlantic seat,/ By green orchard boughs/ Fended from the
heat,/ Where the statesman ploughs/ Furrow for the wheat;/ .../ Then
the perfect
State is come,/ The republican at home./
UGM 4.10 9 ...heat and cold...circle us round in a
wreath of pleasures...
SwM 4.107 16 The whole art of the plant is still to
repeat leaf on leaf
without end, the more or less of heat, light, moisture and food
determining
the form it shall assume.
NMW 4.231 7 Such a man [as Bonaparte] was wanted, and
such a man was
born;...of a perception which did not suffer itself to be baulked or
misled by
any pretences of others, or any superstition or any heat or haste of
his own.
GoW 4.264 25 There is a certain heat in the breast
which attends the
perception of a primary truth...
ET1 5.6 2 [Greenough] believed that the Greeks had
wrought in schools or
fraternities,--the genius of the master imparting his design to his
friends, and inflaming them with it, and when his strength was spent, a
new hand
with equal heat continued the work;...
ET5 5.90 20 [The English] have a wonderful heat in the
pursuit of a public
aim.
ET5 5.99 25 These private, reserved, mute family-men
[of England] can
adopt a public end with all their heat...
ET8 5.137 1 After running each tendency to an extreme,
[the English] try
another tack with equal heat.
ET8 5.140 21 The wrath of London...has a long memory,
and, in its hottest
heat, a register and rule.
ET13 5.215 16 England felt the full heat of the
Christianity which
fermented Europe...
ET14 5.234 24 Even in its elevations materialistic,
[England's] poetry is
common sense inspired; or iron raised to white heat.
ET15 5.267 19 The daily paper [London Times] is the
work...chiefly, it is
said, of young men recently from the University, and perhaps reading
law
in chambers in London. Hence the academic elegance and classic allusion
which adorns its columns. Hence, too, the heat and gallantry of its
onset.
Wth 6.86 27 [Coal] carries the heat of the tropics to
Labrador and the polar
circle;...
CbW 6.258 1 The right partisan is a heady, narrow man,
who, because he
does not see many things, sees some one thing with heat and
exaggeration...
CbW 6.259 12 ...[an absorbing passion] is the heat
which sets our human
atoms spinning...
CbW 6.264 25 The latent heat of an ounce of wood or
stone is
inexhaustible.
Ill 6.323 17 ...the Indians say that they do not think
the white man...afraid
of heat and cold...has any advantage of them.
SS 7.12 16 'T is not new facts that avail, but the heat
to dissolve everybody'
s facts.
SS 7.12 17 Heat puts you in right relation with
magazines of facts.
SS 7.13 4 ...this genial heat [of animal spirits] is
latent in all constitutions...
Elo1 7.61 4 Our temperaments differ in capacity of
heat...
Elo1 7.67 20 Perhaps it is the lowest of the qualities
of an orator, but it is, on so many occasions, of chief importance,--a
certain robust and radiant
physical health; or,--shall I say?--great volumes of animal heat.
Elo1 7.92 17 For the explosions and eruptions, there
must be accumulations
of heat somewhere...
Farm 7.143 1 Long before [the farmer] was born, the sun
of ages... mellowed his land, soaked it with light and heat...
Farm 7.143 17 You cannot...strip off from [an
atom]...the relation to light
and heat...
Farm 7.144 22 Air is matter subdued by heat.
Farm 7.148 16 The high wall reflecting the heat back on
the soil gives that
acre a quadruple share of sunshine...
Farm 7.152 4 ...[the first planter] learns...that the
earth...works for him
when he is asleep, when it rains, when heat overcomes him.
WD 7.175 7 ...that flexile clay of which these old
brothers moulded their
admirable symbols...was...the heat of the blood and the heaving of the
lungs;...
PI 8.9 1 The laws of light and of heat translate each
other;...
SA 8.85 23 ...the wily old Talleyrand would still say,
Surtout, messieurs, pas de zele,--Above all, gentlemen, no heat.
SA 8.86 8 It is an excellent custom of the
Quakers...the silent prayer before
meals. ... What a check to the violent manners which sometimes come to
the table,--of wrath, and whining, and heat in trifles!
SA 8.86 15 A man makes his inferiors his superiors by
heat.
SA 8.104 3 If [a people is] occupied in its own affairs
and thoughts and
men, with a heat which excludes almost the notice of any other
people... they are sublime;...
Elo2 8.117 15 The special ingredients of this force [of
eloquence] are... logic; imagination...passion, which is the heat;...
Elo2 8.119 15 What is peculiar in [eloquence] is a
certain creative heat...
Elo2 8.119 18 Those whom we admire--the great
orators--have some habit
of heat...
Elo2 8.126 21 ...at a great heat [men] can all express
themselves with an
almost equal force.
Elo2 8.126 22 ...it costs a great heat to enable a
heavy man to come up with
those who have a quick sensibility.
Elo2 8.129 27 ...the essential thing [in eloquence] is
heat, and heat comes
of sincerity.
PPo 8.238 15 The prolific sun and the sudden and rank
plenty which his
heat engenders, make subsistence easy [in the East].
PPo 8.238 23 My father's empire, said Cyrus to
Xenophon, is so large that
people perish with cold at one extremity whilst they are suffocated
with
heat at the other.
Insp 8.276 5 We must prize our own youth. Later, we
want heat to execute
our plans...
Insp 8.276 7 We must prize our own youth. Later, we
want heat to execute
our plans...the whole armory of means are all present, but a certain
heat that
once used not to fail, refuses its office...
Insp 8.276 10 [Inspiration] seems a semi-animal
heat;...
Insp 8.288 23 In the hotel...I command an astronomic
leisure. I forget rain, wind, cold and heat.
Imtl 8.323 9 The hearth blazes in the middle and a
grateful heat is spread
around...
PerF 10.71 4 The coal on your grate gives out in
decomposing to-day
exactly the same amount of light and heat which was taken from the
sunshine in its formation in the leaves and boughs of the antediluvian
tree.
PerF 10.71 23 ...gravity is as adhesive, heat as
expansive...as on the first
day.
PerF 10.71 26 When the heat is less here it is not
lost, but more heat is
there.
PerF 10.72 23 The husbandry learned in the economy of
heat or light or
steam or muscular fibre applies precisely to the use of wit.
PerF 10.82 16 The story of Orpheus, of Arion, of the
Arabian minstrel, are
not fables, but experiments on the same iron at white heat.
Chr2 10.100 6 ...the Deity does not break his firm laws
in respect to
imparting truth, more than in imparting material heat and light.
Edc1 10.127 25 This apparatus of wants and faculties,
this craving body... educate the wondrous creature which they satisfy
with light, with heat...
Supl 10.167 14 The English mind...stigmatizes any heat
or hyperbole as
Irish, French, Italian...
SovE 10.186 19 All forces are found in Nature united
with that which they
move: heat is not separate...
LLNE 10.343 8 As these persons became in the common
chances of
society acquainted with each other, there resulted certainly strong
friendships, which of course were exclusive in proportion to their
heat...
HDC 11.33 16 ...in time of summer, the sun casts such a
reflecting heat
from the sweet fern, whose scent is very strong, that some [pilgrims]
nearly
fainted.
HDC 11.63 20 ...the country people came armed into
Boston, on the
afternoon (of Thursday, 18th April) in such rage and heat, as made us
all
tremble to think what would follow;...
EWI 11.104 10 ...if we saw men's backs flayed with
cowhides, and hot rum
poured on, superinduced with brine or pickle, rubbed in with a
cornhusk, in
the scorching heat of the sun;...we too should wince.
EWI 11.124 17 [The negroes] seemed created by
Providence to bear the
heat and the whipping, and make these fine articles.
FSLC 11.200 20 The words of John Randolph, wiser than
he knew, have
been ringing ominously in all echoes for thirty years, words spoken in
the
heat of the Missouri debate.
SMC 11.350 21 ...as we have learned that the upheaved
mountain, from
which these discs or flakes were broken, was once a glowing mass at
white
heat, slowly crystallized, then uplifted by the central fires of the
globe: so
the roots of events [the Concord Monument] appropriately marks are in
the
heart of the universe.
SMC 11.355 6 ...armies, which are only wandering
cities, generate a vast
heat...
SMC 11.364 23 At this time Captain Prescott was daily
threatened with
sickness, and suffered the more from this heat.
Shak1 11.452 3 There are periods fruitful of great men;
others, barren;, or, as the world is always equal to itself, periods
when the heat is latent,- others when it is given out.
PLT 12.25 6 In the orchard many trees send out a
moderate shoot in the
first summer heat, and stop.
PLT 12.55 26 The right partisan is a heady man,
who...sees some one thing
with heat and exaggeration;...
CInt 12.130 20 Go sit with the Hermit in you, who knows
more than you
do. You will find...doors opened to grander entertainments. Yet all
comes
easily that he does, as snow and vapor, heat, wind and light.
CL 12.140 11 In summer, we have...scores of days when
the heat is so rich, and yet so tempered, that it is delicious to live.
Bost 12.194 9 Who can read the fiery ejaculations of
Saint Augustine...of
Milton, of Bunyan even...without contrasting their immortal heat with
the
cold complexion of our recent wits?
MAng1 12.231 10 ...is there not something affecting in
the spectacle of an
old man [Michelangelo], on the verge of ninety years, carrying steadily
onward, with the heat and determination of manhood, his poetic
conceptions into progressive execution...
MAng1 12.233 22 As from the fire, heat cannot be
divided, no more can
beauty from the eternal.
Heat, n. (1)
Nat 1.39 17 ...weigh the problems suggested concerning
Light, Heat...and
judge whether the interest of natural science is likely to be soon
exhausted.
heated, adj. (3)
Con 1.311 21 ...for thee the hospitable North opens its
heated palaces under
the polar circle;...
Bost 12.196 15 New England lies in the cold and hostile
latitude, which by
shutting men up in houses and tight and heated rooms a large part of
the
year...defrauds the human being in some degree of his relations to
external
nature;...
Milt1 12.249 19 [Milton] writes whilst he is heated;...
heated, v. (4)
Wth 6.115 11 [The pale scholar] is heated and untuned,
and by and by
wakes up from his idiot dream of chickweed and red-root, to remember
his
morning thought...
SA 8.80 15 The staple figure in novels is the man...who
sits, among the
young aspirants and desperates...and, never sharing their affections or
debilities...knows his way and carries his points. They may scream or
applaud, he is never engaged or heated.
PLT 12.23 12 Every scholar knows that he applies
himself coldly and
slowly at first to his task, but, with the progress of the work, the
mind itself
becomes heated, and sees far and wide as it approaches the end...
Mem 12.98 8 The more [the orator] is heated, the wider
he sees;...
heath, adj. (1)
CInt 12.129 25 It was in a beggarly heath farm...that
Burns found his fancy
so sprightly.
heath, n. (2)
Con 1.311 12 Would you have...preferred your freedom on
a heath...to this
towered and citied world?...
Schr 10.288 2 ...[he that would sacrifice at the Muse's
altar] may live on a
heath without trees;...
heathen, adj. (2)
ET4 5.51 7 Everything English is a fusion of distant and
antagonistic
elements. The language is mixed;...a country of extemes,--dukes and
chartists, Bishops of Durham and naked heathen colliers;...
Wsp 6.206 9 Hengist had verament/ A daughter both fair
and gent,/ But she
was heathen Sarazine,/ And Vortigern for love fine/ Her took to fere
and to
wife,/ And was cursed in all his life;/...
heathen, n. (1)
Wsp 6.206 13 Hengist had verament/ A daughter both fair
and gent,/ But
she was heathen Sarazine,/ And Vortigern for love fine/ Her took to
fere
and to wife,/ And was cursed in all his life;/ For he let Christian wed
heathen,/ And mixed our blood as flesh and mathen./
heathenism, n. (1)
ET13 5.229 16 ...the religion of the day [in England] is
a theatrical Sinai, where the thunders are supplied by the
property-man. The fanaticism and
hypocrisy create satire. ... Nature revenges herself more summarily by
the
heathenism of the lower classes.
heathenisms, n. (1)
Wsp 6.208 24 In creeds never was such levity; witness
the heathenisms in
Christianity...
heather, n. (1)
RBur 11.442 2 What a love of Nature [in Burns], and,
shall I say it? of
middle-class Nature. Not like...Moore, in the luxurious East, but in
the
homely landscape which the poor see around them...birds, hares,
field-mice, thistles and heather...
heathery, adj. (1)
ET1 5.15 4 I found the house [Craigenputtock] amid
desolate heathery
hills...
heaths, n. (2)
ET3 5.39 5 The land [in England] naturally abounds with
game; immense
heaths and downs are paved with quails, grouse and woodcock...
SHC 11.435 2 Bleak sea-rocks and sea-downs and blasted
heaths have their
own beauty;...
heat-lightning, n. (1)
Ill 6.307 20 Know, the stars yonder,/ The stars
everlasting,/ Are fugitive
also,/ And emulate, vaulted,/ The lambent heat-lightning,/ And
fire-fly's
flight./
heat-pipes, n. (1)
Res 8.142 22 ...the walls of a modern house are
perforated with water-pipes, sound-pipes, gas-pipes, heat-pipes...
heats, n. (10)
LT 1.277 14 [The Reforms] mix the fire of the moral
sentiment with
personal and party heats...
Lov1 2.177 14 The heats that have opened [the lover's]
perceptions of
natural beauty have made him love music and verse.
ET4 5.73 23 Every [English] inn-room is lined with
pictures of races; telegraphs communicate, every hour, tidings of the
heats from Newmarket
and Ascot;...
ET13 5.220 5 Heats and genial periods arrive in
history...
Ctr 6.164 26 ...in an old community a well-born
proprietor is usually
found, after the first heats of youth, to be a careful husband...
Civ 7.28 1 We had letters to send: couriers...foundered
their horses; bad
roads in spring, snowdrifts in winter, heats in summer;...
Elo1 7.80 13 ...among our cool and calculating
people...where heats and
panics and abandonments are quite out of the system, there is a good
deal of
skepticism as to extraordinary influence.
FSLC 11.213 23 That is the secret of Southern power,
that they rest not on
meetings, but on private heats and courages.
Bost 12.198 26 When one thinks of the enterprises that
are attempted in the
heats of youth...we see with new increased respect the solid,
well-calculated
scheme of these emigrants [to New England]...
Milt1 12.268 3 [Milton] felt the heats of that love
which esteems no office
mean.
heats, v. (1)
PC 8.223 11 I shall never believe that centrifugence and
centripetence
balance, unless mind heats and meliorates...
heave, v. (3)
Nat2 3.184 11 Once heave the ball from the hand, and we
can show how all
this mighty order grew.
SovE 10.193 7 All the tyrants and proprietors and
monopolists of the world
in vain set their shoulders to heave the bar [of Divine justice].
MLit 12.310 25 ...[the library of the Present Age]
vents books...that seem
to heave with the life of millions...
Heaven, Angels of, n. (1)
LLNE 10.336 8 ...the paramount source of the religious
revolution was
Modern Science; beginning with Copernicus, who destroyed the pagan
fictions of the Church, by showing mankind that the earth on which we
live
was not the centre of the Universe...and thus fitted to be the platform
on
which the Drama of the Divine Judgment was played before the assembled
Angels of Heaven...
heaven, n. (210)
Nat 1.9 5 [The lover of nature's] intercourse with
heaven and earth
becomes part of his daily food.
Nat 1.20 16 The winds and waves, said Gibbon, are
always on the side of
the ablest navigators. So are...all the stars of heaven.
Nat 1.32 12 Did it need...this host of orbs in heaven,
to furnish man with
the dictionary and grammar of his municipal speech?
Nat 1.40 22 ...every globe in the remotest
heaven...shall hint or thunder to
man the laws of right and wrong...
Nat 1.47 18 ...what difference does it make, whether
Orion is up there in
heaven, or some god paints the image in the firmament of the soul?
Nat 1.69 5 For us, the winds do blow,/ The earth does
rest, heaven move.../
Nat 1.76 7 Every spirit builds itself...a world, and
beyond its world a
heaven.
Nat 1.76 11 Adam called his house, heaven and earth;...
DSA 1.123 22 ...of their own volition, souls proceed
into heaven, into hell.
DSA 1.129 12 The understanding...said...This was
Jehovah come down out
of heaven...
DSA 1.131 20 ...you shall not dare and live...in
company with the infinite
Beauty which heaven and earth reflect to you...
DSA 1.133 14 The preachers do not see that they...shear
[Jesus] of...the
attributes of heaven.
DSA 1.136 21 Where now sounds the persuasion,
that...imparadises my
heart, and so affirms its own origin in heaven?
LE 1.158 25 [The scholar] inhales the year as a
vapor...its sparkling
January heaven.
LE 1.187 17 ...[Thought] shall yield every sincere good
that is in the soul to
the scholar beloved of earth and heaven.
MN 1.210 8 [A man's] health and greatness consist in
his being the channel
through which heaven flows to earth...
MN 1.210 14 Are there not moments in the history of
heaven when the
human race was not counted by individuals, but was only the
Influenced...
MN 1.212 13 Every star in heaven is discontented and
insatiable.
MR 1.250 23 ...the believer not only beholds his heaven
to be possible, but
already to begin to exist...
LT 1.291 13 ...the highest compliment man ever receives
from heaven is
the sending to him its disguised and discredited angels.
Con 1.309 18 Yonder sun in heaven you would pluck down
from shining
on the universe, and make him a property and privacy, if you could;...
Con 1.324 21 ...the stars in heaven shall glow with a
kindlier beam, that I
have lived.
YA 1.393 19 ...there is no end to the wheels within
wheels of this spiral
heaven [English aristocracy].
Hist 2.9 14 Who cares what the fact was, when we have
made a
constellation of it to hang in heaven an immortal sign?
Hist 2.39 14 [Each man] shall...bring with him into
humble cottages...all
the recorded benefits of heaven and earth.
SR 2.80 8 ...the luminaries of heaven seem to [the
unbalanced mind] hung
on the arch their master built.
Comp 2.107 19 ...if the sun in heaven should transgress
his path [the
Furies] would punish him.
Comp 2.110 24 The exclusionist in religion does not see
that he shuts the
door of heaven on himself, in striving to shut others out.
SL 2.140 2 If we would not be mar-plots with our
miserable interferences... the heaven predicted from the beginning of
the world...would organize
itself...
SL 2.140 13 ...that which I call heaven...is the state
or circumstance
desirable to my constitution;...
SL 2.149 26 Gertrude is enamored of Guy;...to live with
him were life
indeed...and heaven and earth are moved to that end.
SL 2.162 21 Heaven is large...
Lov1 2.174 11 ...the celestial rapture falling out of
heaven seizes only upon
those of tender age...
Fdsp 2.200 21 The good spirit of our life has no heaven
which is the price
of rashness.
OS 2.270 4 ...I desire...to indicate the heaven of this
deity...
OS 2.283 16 Men ask concerning...the employments of
heaven...
OS 2.295 23 Before that heaven which our presentiments
foreshow us, we
cannot easily praise any form of life we have seen or read of.
Cir 2.305 13 In the thought of to-morrow there is a
power to...marshal thee
to a heaven which no epic dream has yet depicted.
Int 2.329 1 We are the prisoners of ideas. They catch
us up for moments
into their heaven...
Int 2.344 5 ...let [new doctrines] not go until their
blessing be won, and
after a short season...they will be...one more bright star shining
serenely in
your heaven...
Int 2.347 8 The angels are so enamored of the language
that is spoken in
heaven that they will not distort their lips with the hissing and
unmusical
dialects of men...
Art1 2.357 11 ...then is my eye opened to the eternal
picture which nature
paints in the street, with moving men and children...capped and based
by
heaven, earth, and sea.
Pt1 3.10 18 I remember when I was young how much I was
moved one
morning by tidings that genius had appeared in a youth who sat near me
at
table. He...had written hundreds of lines, but could not tell whether
that
which was in him was therein told; he could tell nothing but that all
was
changed,--man, beast, heaven, earth and sea.
Pt1 3.12 6 ...from the heaven of truth I shall see and
comprehend my
relations.
Pt1 3.12 17 Oftener it falls that this winged man, who
will carry me into the
heaven, whirls me into mists...
Pt1 3.12 26 ...the all-piercing, all-feeding and ocular
air of heaven that man
shall never inhabit.
Pt1 3.14 21 The mighty heaven, said Proclus, exhibits,
in its
transfigurations, clear images of the splendor of intellectual
perceptions;...
Pt1 3.31 20 ...John saw, in the Apocalypse...the stars
fall from heaven...
Pt1 3.33 18 ...every heaven is also a prison.
Pt1 3.36 5 The men in one of [Swedenborg's] visions,
seen in heavenly
light, appeared like dragons, and seemed in darkness; but to each other
they
appeared as men, and when the light from heaven shone into their cabin,
they complained of the darkness...
Pt1 3.42 18 ...Wherever the blue heaven is hung by
clouds or sown with
stars...there is Beauty...shed for thee [O poet]...
Exp 3.71 5 Underneath the inharmonious and trivial
particulars, is...the
heaven without rent or seam.
Exp 3.73 13 This vigor is...in the highest degree
unbending. Nourish it
correctly and do it no injury, and it will fill up the vacancy between
heaven
and earth.
Chr1 3.110 5 I find it more credible, since it is
anterior information, that
one man should know heaven, as the Chinese say, than that so many men
should know the world.
Chr1 3.110 10 He who confronts the gods, without any
misgiving, knows
heaven;...
Chr1 3.115 6 When at last that which we have always
longed for [a fine
character] is arrived...then to be critical...argues a vulgarity that
seems to
shut the doors of heaven.
Mrs1 3.133 27 We pointedly, and by name, introduce the
parties to each
other. Know you before all heaven and earth, that this is Andrew, and
this is
Gregory...
Mrs1 3.153 8 ...the advantages which fashion values are
plants which
thrive in very confined localities, in a few streets namely. Out of
this
precinct they...are of no use...in the heaven of thought or virtue.
Nat2 3.172 5 The blue zenith is the point in which
romance and reality
meet. I think if we should be rapt away into all that and dream of
heaven... the upper sky would be all that would remain of our
furniture.
Nat2 3.193 13 [The maiden] was heaven whilst [the
lover] pursued her as a
star...
Nat2 3.193 15 [The maiden] was heaven whilst [the
lover] pursued her as a
star: she cannot be heaven if she stoops to such a one as he.
Nat2 3.193 24 Are we tickled trout, and fools of
nature? One look at the
face of heaven and earth lays all petulance at rest...
NR 3.242 3 ...rightly every man is a channel through
which heaven
floweth...
NER 3.276 23 ...[those who reject us] build a heaven
before us whereof we
had not dreamed...
UGM 4.12 10 In one of those celestial days when heaven
and earth meet
and adorn each other, it seems a poverty that we can only spend it
once...
UGM 4.31 27 ...heaven reserves an equal scope for every
creature.
PPh 4.51 2 As if [Krishna] had said, All is for the
soul, and the soul is
Vishnu;...and heaven itself a decoy.
PPh 4.51 5 That which the soul seeks is resolution into
being above form, out of Tartarus and out of heaven...
PPh 4.62 17 There is a scale; and the correspondence of
heaven to earth...is
our guide.
PPh 4.76 1 Mounting into heaven...[Plato] is literary,
and never otherwise.
PNR 4.86 25 All the circles of the visible heaven
represent [to Plato] as
many circles in the rational soul.
PNR 4.88 23 Intellect, [Plato] said, is king of heaven
and of earth;...
SwM 4.94 24 In the language of the Koran, God said, The
heaven and the
earth and all that is between them, think ye that we created them in
jest, and
that ye shall not return to us?
SwM 4.96 7 The soul having been often born...having
beheld the things
which are here, those which are in heaven and those which are beneath,
there is nothing of which she has not gained the knowledge...
SwM 4.109 13 Creative force, like a musical composer,
goes on
unweariedly repeating a simple air or theme...ten thousand times
reverberated, till it fills earth and heaven with the chant.
SwM 4.114 25 Man is a kind of very minute heaven...
SwM 4.114 26 Man is a kind of very minute heaven,
corresponding to the
world of spirits and to heaven.
SwM 4.120 22 The reason why all and single things, in
the heavens and on
earth, are representative, is because they exist from an influx of the
Lord, through heaven [said Swedenborg].
SwM 4.126 4 [To Swedenborg] They who place merit in
good works seem
to themselves to cut wood. I asked such, if they were not wearied? They
replied, that they have not yet done work enough to merit heaven.
SwM 4.126 7 [Swedenborg] delivers golden sayings which
express with
singular beauty the ethical laws; as when he uttered that famed
sentence, that In heaven the angels are advancing continually to the
springtime of
their youth, so that the oldest angel appears the youngest...
SwM 4.126 13 [Swedenborg] delivers golden sayings which
express with
singular beauty the ethical laws;...Man, in his perfect form, is
heaven...
SwM 4.126 16 [Swedenborg] delivers golden sayings which
express with
singular beauty the ethical laws;...Ends always ascend as nature
descends. And the truly poetic account of the writing in the inmost
heaven, which, as
it consists of inflexions according to the form of heaven, can be read
without instruction.
SwM 4.126 17 [Swedenborg] delivers golden sayings which
express with
singular beauty the ethical laws;...Ends always ascend as nature
descends. And the truly poetic account of the writing in the inmost
heaven, which, as
it consists of inflexions according to the form of heaven, can be read
without instruction.
SwM 4.126 21 [According to Swedenborg] It is never
permitted to any one, in heaven, to stand behind another and look at
the back of his head;...
SwM 4.127 25 ...though the virgins [Swedenborg] saw in
heaven were
beautiful, the wives were incomparably more beautiful...
SwM 4.128 5 [Swedenborg]...though he finds false
marriages on earth, fancies a wiser choice in heaven.
SwM 4.128 27 Heaven is not the pairing of two, but the
communion of all
souls.
SwM 4.131 4 Beauty is disgraced, love is unlovely, when
truth, the half
part of heaven, is denied...
SwM 4.139 22 If a man say that the Holy Ghost has
informed him...that the
Dutch, in the other world, live in a heaven by themselves...I reply
that the
Spirit which is holy is reserved, taciturn, and deals in laws.
SwM 4.139 23 If a man say that the Holy Ghost has
informed him...that the
Dutch, in the other world, live in a heaven by themselves, and the
English
in a heaven by themselves; I reply that the Spirit which is holy is
reserved, taciturn, and deals in laws.
SwM 4.140 19 The secret of heaven is kept from age to
age.
SwM 4.141 16 ...there is [in Swedenborg] no beauty, no
heaven: for angels, goblins.
SwM 4.142 1 When [Swedenborg] mounts into the heaven, I
do not hear its
language.
SwM 4.142 8 These angels that Swedenborg paints...are
all country
parsons: their heaven is a fete champetre...
MoS 4.180 26 Once admitted to the heaven of thought,
[some minds] see
no relapse into night...
MoS 4.181 1 [To some minds] Heaven is within heaven,
and sky over sky...
MoS 4.181 2 [To some minds] Heaven is within heaven,
and sky over sky...
MoS 4.181 4 Others there are to whom the heaven is
brass...
MoS 4.184 6 [The divine Providence] has shown the
heaven and earth to
every child...
MoS 4.185 26 ...throughout history, heaven seems to
affect low and poor
means.
ShP 4.208 2 ...in [Shakespeare's] drama, as in all
great works of art...the
Genius draws up the ladder after him, when the creative age goes up to
heaven...
ShP 4.208 14 Read the antique documents extricated,
analyzed and
compared by the assiduous Dyce and Collier, and now read one of
[Shakespeare's] skyey sentences...which seem to have fallen out of
heaven... and tell me if they match;...
ET5 5.91 5 Sir John Herschel...expatriated himself for
years at the Cape of
Good Hope, finished his inventory of the southern heaven...
ET8 5.128 13 Was it...a stroke of humor in the serious
Swedenborg...that
made him shut up the English souls in a heaven by themselves?
ET11 5.187 11 [English nobility] is a romance adorning
English life with a
larger horizon; a midway heaven, fulfilling to their sense their fairy
tales
and poetry.
ET13 5.217 1 The Catholic Church, thrown on this
toiling, serious people [of England], has made in fourteen centuries a
massive system...at once
domestical and stately. In the long time, it has blended with
everything in
heaven above and the earth beneath.
ET14 5.242 11 In England these [generalizations]...do
all have a kind of
filial retrospect to Plato and the Greeks. Of this kind is...the theory
of
Swedenborg...that the man makes his heaven and hell;...
ET14 5.258 11 It was no Oxonian, but Hafiz, who said,
Let us...break up
the tiresome old roof of heaven into new forms.
F 6.20 18 ...the gods in the Norse heaven were unable
to bind the Fenris
Wolf...
F 6.41 10 We know what madness belongs to love,-what
power to paint a
vile object in hues of heaven.
Ctr 6.137 14 In the Norse heaven of our forefathers,
Thor's house had five
hundred and forty floors;...
Ctr 6.162 24 Heaven sometimes hedges a rare character
about with
ungainliness and odium...
Bhr 6.194 8 ...such was the contented spirit of the
monk [Basle] that he
found something to praise in every place and company, though in hell,
and
made a kind of heaven of it.
Bhr 6.194 14 The legend says [the monk Basle's]
sentence was remitted, and he was allowed to go into heaven...
Wsp 6.204 11 The builder of heaven has not so ill
constructed his creature
as that the religion, that is, the public nature, should fall out...
Wsp 6.205 3 Heaven always bears some proportion to
earth.
Wsp 6.207 3 The religion of the early English poets is
anomalous, so
devout and so blasphemous, in the same breath. Such is Chaucer's
extraordinary confusion of heaven and earth in the picture of Dido...
Wsp 6.207 7 [Dido] was so fair,/ So young, so lusty,
with her eyen glad,/ That if that God that heaven and earthe made/
Would have a love for beauty
and goodness,/ And womanhede, truth, and seemliness,/ Whom should he
loven but this lady sweet?/ There n' is no woman to him half so meet./
Wsp 6.214 5 Heaven deals with us on no representative
system.
Wsp 6.241 15 There will be a new church founded on
moral science;...it
will have heaven and earth for its beams and rafters;...
CbW 6.269 3 When joy or calamity or genius shall show
[the youth his
purpose], then woods...then city shopmen...will mirror back to him its
unfathomable heaven...
Bty 6.284 6 The motive of science was the extension of
man...till his hands
should touch the stars...and, through his sympathy, heaven and earth
should
talk with him.
Ill 6.310 14 ...on looking upwards [in the Mammoth
Cave], I saw or seemed
to see the night heaven thick with stars...
Ill 6.319 14 As if one shut up always in a tower, with
one window through
which the face of heaven and earth could be seen, should fancy that all
the
marvels he beheld belonged to that window.
SS 7.5 16 God may forgive sins, [my friend] said, but
awkwardness has no
forgiveness in heaven or earth.
SS 7.6 25 Even Swedenborg...who reprobates to weariness
the danger and
vice of pure intellect, is constrained to make an extraordinary
exception: There are also angels who do not live consociated, but
separate, house and
house; these dwell in the midst of heaven, because they are the best of
angels.
Elo1 7.59 8 For whom the Muses smile upon/ .../
...though he speak in
midnight dark;/ In heaven no star, on earth no spark,--/ Yet before the
listener's eye/ Swims the world in ecstasy/...
WD 7.170 2 The scholar must look long for the right hour
for Plato's
Timaeus. At last the elect morning arrives, the early dawn,--a few
lights
conspicuous in the heaven...
WD 7.171 6 ...the treasures which Nature spent itself
to amass...the heaven
deep with worlds;...are given immeasurably to all.
WD 7.177 2 The highest heaven of wisdom is alike near
from every point...
Boks 7.198 17 You find in [Plato] that which you have
already found in
Homer...yet with no less security of bold and perfect song, when he
cares to
use it, and with some harp-strings fetched from a higher heaven.
Boks 7.204 15 I like to be beholden to the great
metropolitan English
speech, the sea which receives tributaries from every region under
heaven.
Clbs 7.238 13 The startled giant [Wafthrudnir]
replies...with Odin
contended I in wise words. Thou must ever the wisest be. And still the
gods
and giants are so known, and still they play the same game in all the
million
mansions of heaven and of earth;...
Suc 7.303 20 Lofn is as puissant a divinity in the
Norse Edda as...Eros in
the Greek, or Cupid in the Latin heaven.
PI 8.20 10 ...[Swedenborg said]: Names, countries,
nations and the like are
not at all known to those who are in heaven;...
PI 8.24 15 [The intellect] knows that these
transfigured results are not the
brute experiences, just as souls in heaven are not the red bodies they
once
animated.
PI 8.26 9 ...when, on rare days, [nature] speaks to the
imagination, we feel
that the huge heaven and earth are but a web drawn around us...
PI 8.47 11 ...human passion, seizing these
constitutional tunes, aims to fill
them with appropriate words, or marry music to thought, believing, as
we
believe of all marriage, that matches are made in heaven...
PI 8.63 11 [The high poets] have touched this heaven
and retain afterwards
some sparkle of it...
PI 8.71 3 In good society, nay, among the angels in
heaven, is not
everything spoken in fine parable...
PC 8.223 14 On...this all-dissolving unity, the
emphasis of heaven and
earth is laid.
PC 8.225 4 Look out into the July night and see the
broad belt of silver
flame which flashes up the half of heaven...
PPo 8.244 27 [Hafiz] says,-I batter the wheel of
heaven/ When it rolls not
rightly by;/ I am not one of the snivellers/ Who fall thereon and die./
PPo 8.246 19 The Builder of heaven/ Hath sundered the
earth,/ So that no
footway/ Leads out of it forth./
PPo 8.249 13 Love is a leveller, and Allah becomes a
groom, and heaven a
closet, in [Hafiz's] daring hymns to his mistress or to his cupbearer.
PPo 8.252 20 [Hafiz] tells us, The angels in heaven
were lately learning his
last pieces.
PPo 8.253 10 When Hafiz sings...Anaitis, leader of the
starry host, calls
even the Messiah in heaven out to the dance.
PPo 8.255 15 Round and round this heap of ashes/ Now
flies the bird [the
phoenix] amain,/ But in that odorous niche of heaven/ Nestles the bird
again./
PPo 8.256 3 Come!-the palace of heaven rests on aery
pillars,-/ Come, and bring me wine; our days are wind./
PPo 8.256 7 Told I thee yester-morn how the Iris of
heaven/ Brought to me
in my cup a gospel of joy?/
PPo 8.256 12 O high-flying falcon! the Tree of Life is
thy perch;/ This
nook of grief fits thee ill for a nest./ Hearken! they call to thee
down from
the ramparts of heaven;/ I cannot divine what holds thee here in a
net./
Insp 8.276 19 We are waiting until some tyrannous idea
emerging out of
heaven shall seize and bereave us of this liberty with which we are
falling
abroad.
Insp 8.289 6 Novelty, surprise, change of scene...break
up the tiresome old
roof of heaven into new forms, as Hafiz said.
Grts 8.304 2 ...follow the path your genius traces like
the galaxy of heaven
for you to walk in.
Imtl 8.327 11 Swedenborg described an intelligible
heaven...
Imtl 8.344 20 My idea of heaven is that there is no
melodrama in it at all;...
Imtl 8.346 19 ...only by rare integrity, by a man
permeated and perfumed
with airs of heaven...can the vision [of immortality] be clear to a use
the
most sublime.
Imtl 8.349 20 For the second boon, Nachiketas asks that
the fire by which
heaven is gained be made known to him;...
Imtl 8.350 19 [Yama said to Nachiketas] All those
desires that are difficult
to gain in the world of mortals, all those ask thou at thy
pleasure;-those
fair nymphs of heaven with their chariots...
Chr2 10.101 14 When Omar prayed and loved,/ Where
Syrian waters roll,/ Aloft the ninth heaven glowed and moved/ To the
tread of the jubilant soul./
Chr2 10.114 9 The soul...finds in every cart-path of
labor ways to heaven...
Edc1 10.130 8 Why does [man] track in the midnight
heaven a pure spark...
Edc1 10.142 15 Heaven often protects valuable souls
charged with great
secrets, great ideas, by long shutting them up with their own thoughts.
SovE 10.190 17 For my part, said Napoleon, it is not
the mystery of the
incarnation which I discover in religion, but the mystery of social
order, which associates with heaven that idea of equality which
prevents the rich
from destroying the poor.
SovE 10.196 18 The ship of heaven guides itself...
Prch 10.221 14 The understanding...because it has found
absurdities to
which the sentiment of veneration is attached, sneers at veneration; so
that
analysis has run to seed in unbelief. There is no faith left. We laugh
and
hiss, pleased with our power in making heaven and earth a howling
wilderness.
Prch 10.222 5 To [the soul which is without God] heaven
and earth have
lost their beauty.
Prch 10.222 8 I cannot keep the sun in heaven, if you
take away the
purpose that animates him.
Prch 10.236 3 ...we should...retire a moment to the
grand secret we carry in
our bosom, of inspiration from heaven.
MoL 10.244 13 See the activity of the imagination in
the Crusades...heaven
walked on earth...
Schr 10.263 24 [Intellect] is the power that makes the
world incarnated in
man, and laying again the beams of heaven and earth...
Plu 10.312 22 Plutarch...with every virtue under
heaven, thought it the top
of wisdom to philosophize yet not appear to do it...
LLNE 10.342 7 These fine conversations...were
incomprehensible to some
in the company, and they had their revenge in their little joke. One
declared
that It seemed to him like going to heaven in a swing;...
HDC 11.40 14 [The Concord settler's pastor said] If we
look to number, we
are the fewest;...if to wealth and riches, we are the poorest of all
the people
of God through the whole world. We cannot excel nor so much as equal
other people in these things; and if we come short in grace and
holiness too, we are the most despicable people under heaven.
HDC 11.68 14 ...We cannot possibly view with
indifference the...endeavors
of the enemies of this...country, to rob us of those...rights, that we
are
obliged to no power, under heaven, for the enjoyment of;...
HDC 11.68 25 ...it gives life and strength to every
attempt to oppose [unconstitutional taxes], that not only the people of
this, but the neighboring
provinces are remarkably united in the important and interesting
opposition, which, as it succeeded before, in some measure, by the
blessing of heaven, so, we cannot but hope it will be attended with
still greater success, in
future.
FSLC 11.189 23 I thought it was this fair
mystersy...which made the basis
of human society, and of law; and that to pretend anything else, as
that the
acquisition of property was the end of living, was...instead of noble
motives
and inspirations, and a heaven of companions and angels around and
before
us, to leave us in a grimacing menagerie of monkeys and idiots.
FSLN 11.228 15 ...when allusion was made to the
question of duty and the
sanctions of morality, [Webster] very frankly said, at Albany, Some
higher
law, something existing somewhere between here and the third heaven,-I
do not know where.
JBS 11.278 23 ...[John Brown's] enterprise to go into
Virginia and run off
five hundred or a thousand slaves was...the keeping of an oath made to
heaven and earth forty-seven years before.
ACiv 11.303 20 Here again is a new occasion which
heaven offers to sense
and virtue.
SMC 11.376 1 A gloom gathers on this assembly...for, in
many houses, the
dearet and noblest is gone from their hearth-stone. Yet it is tinged
with light
from heaven.
RBur 11.438 7 Praise to the bard! his words are
driven,/ Like flower-seeds
by the far winds sown,/ Where'er, beneath the sky of heaven,/ The birds
of
fame have flown./ Halleck.
RBur 11.443 1 The memory of Burns,-I am afraid heaven
and earth have
taken too good care of it to leave us anything to say.
CPL 11.498 15 [Peter Bulkeley said] If we look to
number, we are the
fewest;...if to wealth and riches, we are the poorest of all the people
of God
through the whole world. We cannot excel, nor so much as equal other
people in these things, and if we come short in grace and holiness too,
we
are the most despicable people under heaven.
FRep 11.539 27 ...if we have taught...the bolt of
heaven to write our letters
like a Gillot pen, let these wonders work for honest humanity...
PLT 12.9 13 ...'t is a great vice in all countries, the
sacrifice of scholars...to
talk for the amusement of those who wish to be amused, though the stars
of
heaven must be plucked down and packed into rockets to this end.
PLT 12.9 20 Ever since the Norse heaven made the stern
terms of
admission that a man must do something excellent with his hands or
feet... the same demand has been made in Norse earth.
PLT 12.10 9 ...there is a certain beatitude...to which
all men are entitled... and to which their entrance must be in every
way forwarded. Practical
men...cannot arrive at this. Something very different has to be
done,-the
availing ourselves of every impulse of genius, an emanation of the
heaven it
tells of...
PLT 12.13 24 The adepts value only the pure geometry,
the aerial bridge
ascending from earth to heaven with arches and abutments of pure
reason.
PLT 12.17 14 ...as man is conscious of the law of
vegetable and animal
nature, so is he aware of an Intellect which overhangs his
consciousness
like a sky, of degree above degree, of heaven within heaven.
PLT 12.17 15 ...as man is conscious of the law of
vegetable and animal
nature, so is he aware of an Intellect which overhangs his
consciousness
like a sky, of degree above degree, of heaven within heaven.
PLT 12.42 6 ...I hear a whisper, which I dare trust,
that [perception] is the
thread on which the earth and the heaven of heavens are strung.
PLT 12.46 21 Heaven is the exercise of the faculties...
PLT 12.58 8 The expansions [of the Intellect] are the
invitations from
heaven to try a larger sweep...
II 12.70 5 The star climbs for a time the heaven, but
never reaches its
zenith;...
II 12.74 27 ...the ship of heaven guides itself, and
will not accept a wooden
rudder.
Mem 12.92 20 ...in the history of character the day
comes when you are
incapable of such crime [of neglect, selfishness, passion]. Then...you
look
on it as heaven looks on it...
Mem 12.103 14 The poor short lone fact dies at the
birth. Memory catches
it up into her heaven, and bathes it in immortal waters.
CInt 12.126 12 ...that which [Harvard College] exists
for, to be a fountain
of novelties out of heaven...that it shall not be permitted to do or to
think of.
CL 12.148 15 Our Aryan progenitors in Asia celebrated
the winds as the
conveying Maruts, traversers of places difficult of access. Stable is
their
birthplace in the sky, but they are agitators of heaven and earth...
Bost 12.183 21 There are countries, said Howell, where
the heaven is a
fiery furnace or a blowing bellows, or a dropping sponge, most parts of
the
year.
Milt1 12.250 16 What under heaven had Madame de
Saumaise...to do with
the solemn question whether Charles Stuart had been rightly slain?
Milt1 12.258 11 [Milton says] In those vernal seasons
of the year, when the
air is calm and pleasant, it were an injury and sullenness against
Nature not
to go out...and partake in her rejoicing with heaven and earth.
Milt1 12.275 1 Milton's sublimest song, bursting into
heaven with its peals
of melodious thunder, is the voice of Milton still.
ACri 12.290 5 Dante is the professor that shall teach
both the noble low
style, the power of working up all his experience into heaven and hell;
also
the sculpture of compression.
MLit 12.314 6 Every form under the whole heaven [the
narrow-minded] behold in this most partial light or darkness of intense
selfishness...
Pray 12.350 4 ...with true prayers,/ That shall be up
at heaven and enter
there/ Ere sunrise; prayers from preserved souls,/ From fasting maids,
whose minds are delicate/ To nothing temporal./ Shakspeare..
Pray 12.356 20 Neither was [the light of the soul] so
above my
understanding...as the heaven is above the earth.
PPr 12.388 12 If the good heaven have any good word to
impart to this
unworthy generation, here is one scribe [Carlyle] qualified and clothed
for
its occasion.
Let 12.396 17 How joyfully we have felt the admonition
of larger natures
which despised our aims and pursuits, conscious that a voice out of
heaven
spoke to us in that scorn.
Heaven, n. (39)
LE 1.155 15 ...a scholar is the favorite of Heaven and
earth...
MN 1.194 11 ...the kind Heaven justifies thee...
LT 1.261 23 ...Dante and Milton painted in colossal
their platoons, and
called them Heaven and Hell.
Con 1.296 8 Saturn grew weary of sitting...with none
but the great Uranus
or Heaven beholding him...
SL 2.129 1 The living Heaven thy prayers respect/...
Mrs1 3.147 4 ...As Heaven and Earth are fairer far/ Than
Chaos and blank
Darkness, though once chiefs/ .../ So on our heels a fresh perfection
treads/...
Mrs1 3.147 6 ...as we show beyond that Heaven and Earth/
In form and
shape compact and beautiful;/ .../ So on our heels a fresh perfection
treads/...
ET1 5.14 9 ...Montague, still talking with his back to
the canvas, put up his
hand and touched it, and exclaimed, By Heaven! this picture is not ten
years
old...
F 6.29 11 ...'T is written on the gate of Heaven, Woe
unto him who suffers
himself to be betrayed by Fate!
Wsp 6.202 24 Heaven kindly gave our blood a moral
flow./
Ill 6.321 8 We fancy we have fallen into bad company
and squalid
condition...pots to buy, butcher's meat, sugar, milk and coal. Set me
some
great task, ye gods! and I will show my spirit. Not so, says the good
Heaven;...
SS 7.7 18 We pray to be conventional. But the wary
Heaven takes care you
shall not be, if there is anything good in you.
Elo1 7.61 14 One man is brought to the boiling-point by
the excitement of
conversation in the parlor. ... ...and a fifth [needs] nothing less
than...the
splendors and shades of Heaven and Hell.
Cour 7.261 12 Each [new soldier] whispers to
himself:...only will the
benignant Heaven save me from disgracing myself and my friends and my
State.
PI 8.64 14 Bring us...poetry like that verse of Saadi,
which the angels
testified met the approbation of Allah in Heaven;...
Imtl 8.327 22 Milton anticipated the leading thought of
Swedenborg, when
he wrote, in Paradise Lost,-What if Earth/ Be but the shadow of Heaven,
and things therein/ Each to the other like more than on earth is
thought?/
Dem1 10.10 19 Things are significant enough, Heaven
knows;...
Dem1 10.14 7 ...says Plutarch...we cannot believe that
men are sacred and
favorites of Heaven.
Dem1 10.20 18 It is curious to see what grand powers we
have a hint of and
are mad to grasp, yet how slow Heaven is to trust us with such
edge-tools.
PerF 10.85 23 ...[a survey of cosmical powers] warns
us...out of an idolatry
of forms, instead of working to simple ends, in the belief that Heaven
always succors us in working for these.
Edc1 10.137 13 The charm of life is...these contrasts
and flavors by which
Heaven has modulated the identity of truth...
SovE 10.192 6 The student discovers one day that he
lives in enchantment... and through this enchanted gallery he is led by
unseen guides to read and
learn the laws of Heaven.
MoL 10.242 4 [The scholar]...is born one or two
centuries too early for the
rough and sensual population into which he is thrown. But the Heaven
which sent him hither knew that well enough...
MoL 10.242 14 [The inviolate soul] is...a prophet
surrendered with self-abandoning
sincerity to the Heaven which pours through him its will to
mankind.
MoL 10.248 14 If churches are effete, it is because the
new Heaven forms.
Schr 10.279 21 I declare anew from Heaven that truth
exists new and
beautiful and profitable forevermore.
EzRy 10.379 3 We love the venerable house/ Our fathers
built to God:/ In
Heaven are kept their grateful vows,/ Their dust endears the sod./
MMEm 10.408 13 Our Delphian [Mary Moody Emerson] was
fantastic
enough, Heaven knows...
MMEm 10.423 8 [War] was the glory of the Chosen People,
nay, it is said
there was war in Heaven.
LS 11.24 19 I am content that [the Lord's Supper] stand
to the end of the
world, if it please men and please Heaven...
JBB 11.266 16 ...[John Brown] and his brave boys
vowed-so might
Heaven help and speed 'em-/ They would save those grand old prairies
from the curse that blights the land;/...
ALin 11.336 25 ...what if it should turn out, in the
unfolding of the web... that Heaven...shall make [Lincoln] serve his
country even more by his death
than by his life?
ALin 11.337 15 The ancients believed in a serene and
beautiful Genius... which...carried forward the fortunes of certain
chosen houses...securing at
last the firm prosperity of the favorites of Heaven.
SMC 11.352 22 This new [Concord] Monument is built to
mark the arrival
of the nation at the new principle,-say, rather, at its new
acknowledgment, for the principle is as old as Heaven,-that only that
state can live, in which
injury to the least member is recognized as damage to the whole.
SMC 11.354 21 The [Civil] war made the Divine
Providence credible to
many who did not believe the good Heaven quite honest.
FRO2 11.490 25 I am glad to believe society contains a
class of humble
souls...who think it the highest worship to expect of Heaven the most
and
the best;...
II 12.76 15 Is it that we are such mountains of conceit
that Heaven cannot
enough mortify and snub us...
CInt 12.112 12 ...if to me it is not given/ To fetch
one ingot hence/ Of the
unfading gold of Heaven/ [God's] merchants may dispense,/ Yet well I
know the royal mine/ And know the sparkle of its ore,/ Know Heaven's
truths from lies that shine-/ Explored, they teach us to explore./
ACri 12.283 16 ...Heaven, Hell, power, science, the
Neant, exist to [the
writer] as colors for his brush.
Heaven, Queen of, n. (1)
ET16 5.286 11 Whilst we listened to the organ [at
Salisbury Cathedral], my
friend [Carlyle] remarked, the music is...somewhat as if a monk were
panting to some fine Queen of Heaven.
heaven-facing, adj. (1)
Hist 2.32 15 Every animal...has contrived to get a
footing and to leave the
print of its features and form in some one or other of these upright,
heaven-facing
speakers.
heavenlier, adj. (1)
PI 8.1 8 ...From blue mount and headland dim/ Friendly
hands stretch forth
to him,/ Him they beckon, him advise/ Of heavenlier prosperities/ And a
more excelling grace/ And a truer bosom-glow/ Than the wine-fed
feasters
know./
heavenly, adj. (40)
Nat 1.7 6 The rays that come from those heavenly worlds
will separate
between [a man] and what he touches.
Nat 1.7 10 One might think the atmosphere was made
transparent with this
design, to give man, in the heavenly bodies, the perpetual presence of
the
sublime.
DSA 1.132 12 [The divine bards] admonish me that...they
were not
disobedient to the heavenly vision.
MN 1.210 1 If [a man] listen with insatiable ears...he
is the fool of ideas, and leads a heavenly life.
MR 1.250 20 As we cannot make a planet...by means of
the best... engineers' tools...so neither can we ever construct that
heavenly society you
prate of out of foolish, sick, selfish men and women, such as we know
them
to be.
Tran 1.345 21 In looking at the class of counsel...and
at the matronage of
the land...one asks, Where are they who represented genius, virtue, the
invisible and heavenly world, to these?
Tran 1.357 8 ...[the strong spirits] surrender
themselves with glad heart to
the heavenly guide...
Tran 1.358 19 Perhaps too there might be room [in
society] for the exciters
and monitors; collectors of the heavenly spark...
Cir 2.307 25 Every personal consideration that we allow
costs us heavenly
state.
Art1 2.349 18 So shall the drudge in dusty frock/ Spy
behind the city
clock/ .../ His fathers shining in bright fables,/ His children fed at
heavenly
tables./
Pt1 3.14 4 So every spirit, as it is more pure,/ And
hath in it the more of
heavenly light,/ So it the fairer body doth procure/ To habit in, and
it more
fairly dight,/ With cheerful grace and amiable sight./
Pt1 3.14 18 The earth and the heavenly bodies...we
sensually treat, as if
they were self-existent;...
Pt1 3.31 5 ...Timaeus...affirms a man to be a heavenly
tree...
Pt1 3.36 2 The men in one of [Swedenborg's] visions,
seen in heavenly
light, appeared like dragons...
Exp 3.46 17 Some heavenly days must have been
intercalated somewhere...
Nat2 3.169 4 There are days which occur in this
climate...when the air, the
heavenly bodies and the earth, make a harmony...
Nat2 3.172 1 ...we receive glances from the heavenly
bodies, which call us
to solitude...
SwM 4.121 15 In the transmission of the heavenly
waters, every hose fits
every hydrant.
SwM 4.136 24 The Lutheran bishop's son, for whom the
heavens are
opened, so that he...utters again in his books, as under a heavenly
mandate, the indisputable secrets of moral nature...remains the
Lutheran bishop's
son;...
SwM 4.144 3 ...is [Swedenborg] reporting a breach of
the manners of that
heavenly society?...
SwM 4.145 5 Do not rely on heavenly favor...
ET14 5.256 16 ...if I should count the poets who have
contributed to the
Bible of existing England sentences of guidance and consolation which
are
still glowing and effective,--how few! Shall I find my heavenly bread
in the
reigning poets?
CbW 6.273 9 ...few writers have said anything better to
this point [of
friendship] than Hafiz...Thou learnest no secret until thou knowest
friendship, since to the unsound no heavenly knowledge enters.
Civ 7.29 17 We cannot bring the heavenly powers to us,
but if we will only
choose our jobs in directions in which they travel, they will undertake
them
with the greatest pleasure.
Suc 7.281 5 One thing is forever good;/ That one thing
is Success,--/ Dear
to the Eumenides,/ And to all the heavenly brood./
PI 8.46 10 Who would hold the order of the almanac so
fast but for the
ding-dong,--Thirty days hath September, etc.;--or of the Zodiac, but
for The
Ram, the Bull, the heavenly Twins, etc.?
PI 8.49 10 ...there is nothing on earth which is not in
the heavens in a
heavenly form...
PI 8.63 8 How rarely [the high poets] offer us the
heavenly bread!
PPo 8.258 17 Hafiz says...to the unsound no heavenly
knowledge enters.
PerF 10.84 9 ...this child of the dust throws himself
by obedience into the
circuit of the heavenly wisdom, and shares the secret of God.
MMEm 10.413 12 Ah! were virtue, and that of dear
heavenly meekness
attached by any necessity to a lower rank of genteel people, who would
sympathize with the exalted with satisfaction?
Thor 10.464 18 ...whatever faults or obstructions of
temperament might
cloud it, [Thoreau] was not disobedient to the heavenly vision.
FRep 11.537 13 ...the Genius or Destiny of America
is...a man incessantly
advancing, as the shadow on the dial's face, or the heavenly body by
whose
light it is marked.
PLT 12.16 1 The grandeur of the impression the stars
and heavenly bodies
make on us is surely more valuable than our exact perception of a tub
or a
table on the ground.
PLT 12.17 17 Every just thinker has attempted to
indicate these degrees [of
Intellect], these steps on the heavenly stair...
Bost 12.200 25 The American idea, Emancipation...has,
of course, its
sinister side...but if followed it leads to heavenly places.
EurB 12.367 22 Early in life...[Wordsworth] made his
election between
assuming and defending some legal rights, with the chances of wealth
and a
position in the world, and the inward promptings of his heavenly
genius;...
EurB 12.367 25 ...[Wordsworth] accepted the call to be
a poet, and sat
down...with coarse clothing and plain fare to obey the heavenly vision.
heavens, n. (43)
Nat 1.12 17 The misery of man appears like childish
petulance, when we
explore the steady and prodigal provision that has been made for his
support and delight on this green ball which floats him through the
heavens.
Nat 1.18 17 The heavens change every moment...
Nat 1.22 7 The visible heavens and earth sympathize
with Jesus.
Nat 1.56 26 When [the Supreme Being] prepared the
heavens, [Ideas] were
there;...
DSA 1.136 17 In how many churches...is man made
sensible...that the earth
and heavens are passing into his mind;...
MR 1.243 14 ...attempting to drive along the ecliptic
with one horse of the
heavens and one horse of the earth, there is only discord and ruin and
downfall to chariot and charioteer.
LT 1.266 27 As the solar system moves forward in the
heavens, certain
stars open before us...
Tran 1.331 7 Even the materialist Condillac...was
constrained to say, Though we should soar into the heavens...it is
always our own thought that
we perceive.
Comp 2.106 3 How secret art thou who dwellest in the
highest heavens...O
thou only great God...
SL 2.151 27 [The world] will certainly accept your own
measure of your
doing and being...whether you see your work produced to the concave
sphere of the heavens...
SL 2.156 24 When a man speaks the truth in the spirit
of truth, his eye is as
clear as the heavens.
Lov1 2.184 27 Romeo, if dead, should be cut up into
little stars to make the
heavens fine.
OS 2.271 26 ...there is no screen or ceiling between
our heads and the
infinite heavens...
Pt1 3.12 22 ...I, being myself a novice, am slow in
perceiving that [the
poet] does not know the way into the heavens...
Pt1 3.28 17 ...a great number of such as were
professionally expressers of
Beauty...have been more than others wont to lead a life of pleasure and
indulgence;...and...as it was an emancipation not into the heavens but
into
the freedom of baser places, they were punished for that advantage they
won, by a dissipation and deterioration.
Nat2 3.173 25 He who knows the most; he who knows what
sweets and
virtues are in the ground, the waters, the plants, the heavens, and how
to
come at these enchantments,--is the rich and royal man.
NR 3.229 19 We adjust our instrument for general
observation, and sweep
the heavens as easily as we pick out a single figure in the terrestrial
landscape.
PPh 4.65 11 In the Timaeus [Plato] indicates the
highest employment of the
eyes. By us it is asserted that God invented and bestowed sight on us
for
this purpose,--that on surveying the circles of intelligence in the
heavens, we might properly employ those of our own minds...
SwM 4.110 8 ...the circles of intellect relate to those
of the heavens.
SwM 4.120 19 The reason why all and single things, in
the heavens and on
earth, are representative, is because they exist from an influx of the
Lord, through heaven [said Swedenborg].
SwM 4.132 23 Genius is ever haunted by similar dreams
[to those of
Swedenborg], when the hells and the heavens are opened to it.
SwM 4.134 5 [Swedenborg's] heavens and hells are
dull;...
SwM 4.136 21 The Lutheran bishop's son, for whom the
heavens are
opened...with all these grandeurs resting upon him, remains the
Lutheran
bishop's son;...
ShP 4.217 26 One remembers again the trumpet-text in
the Koran,--The
heavens and the earth and all that is between them, think ye we have
created them in jest?
GoW 4.290 16 We too must write Bibles, to unite again
the heavens and
the earthly world.
ET13 5.225 5 ...[the English] have not been able to
congeal humanity by
act of Parliament. The heavens journey still and sojourn not...
F 6.25 14 We have successive experiences so important
that the new
forgets the old, and hence the mythology of the seven or the nine
heavens.
Boks 7.212 27 What private heavens can we not open, by
yielding to all the
suggestion of rich music!
Suc 7.297 26 We remember when in early youth the earth
spoke and the
heavens glowed;...
PI 8.42 3 Better men saw heavens and earths;...
PI 8.42 8 There was as much creative force then as now,
but it made globes
and astronomic heavens, instead of broadcloth and wine-glasses.
PI 8.49 10 ...there is nothing on earth which is not in
the heavens in a
heavenly form...
PI 8.49 11 ...there is...nothing in the heavens which
is not on the earth in an
earthly form.
PerF 10.68 4 No ray is dimmed, no atom worn,/ My oldest
force is good as
new,/ And the fresh rose on yonder thorn/ Gives back the bending
heavens
in dew./
Supl 10.166 13 Think how much pains astronomers and
opticians have
taken to procure an achromatic lens. Discovery in the heavens has
waited
for it; discovery on the face of the earth not less.
Schr 10.265 27 ...[the poet's] achievement is the
piercing of the brass
heavens of use and limitation...
Schr 10.277 8 These shrewd faculties belong to man. I
love...to see them
trained:...the craft of mathematical combination, which carries a
working-plan
of the heavens and of the earth in a formula.
PLT 12.41 27 [Perceptions] are your door to the seven
heavens...
PLT 12.42 7 ...I hear a whisper, which I dare trust,
that [perception] is the
thread on which the earth and the heaven of heavens are strung.
PLT 12.59 8 We are passing into new heavens in fact by
the movement of
our solar system...
CW 12.175 1 Learn to know the conspicuous planets in
the heavens...
Milt1 12.267 16 ...Milton deserved the apostrophe of
Wordsworth;-Pure
as the naked heavens, majestic, free,/ So didst thou travel on life's
common
way/ In cheerful godliness;.../
MLit 12.331 25 Poetry is with Goethe thus
external...but the Muse never
assays those thunder-tones...which...abolish the old heavens and the
old
earth before the free will or Godhead of man.
heaven's, n. (3)
Nat 1.53 4 ...The ornament of beauty is Suspect,/ A crow
which flies in
heaven's sweetest air./
YA 1.364 27 The heaven's blue pillars are Medea's
house./
Schr 10.279 22 Order is heaven's first law.
Heaven's, n. (5)
Wth 6.83 11 ...well the primal pioneer/ Knew the strong
task to it
assigned,/ Patient through Heaven's enormous year/ To build in matter
home for mind./
Wom 11.413 20 Far have I clambered in my mind,/ But
nought so great as
Love I find./ What is thy tent, where dost thou dwell?/ My mansion is
humility,/ Heaven's vastest capability./
CInt 12.112 16 ...if to me it is not given/ To fetch
one ingot hence/ Of the
unfading gold of Heaven/ [God's] merchants may dispense,/ Yet well I
know the royal mine/ And know the sparkle of its ore,/ Know Heaven's
truths from lies that shine-/ Explored, they teach us to explore./
Milt1 12.260 13 At nineteen years...[Milton] addresses
his native language, saying to it that it would be his choice to leave
trifles for a grave argument... Such where the deep transported mind
may soar/ Above the wheeling poles, and at Heaven's door/ Look in, and
see each blissful deity,/ How he before
the thunderous throne doth lie./
Let 12.392 19 To the railway, we must say,-like the
courageous lord
mayor at his first hunting, when told the hare was coming,-Let it come,
in
Heaven's name, I am not afraid on 't.
heavenward, adv. (1)
Pt1 3.12 20 Oftener it falls that this winged man, who
will carry me into the
heaven...leaps and frisks about with me as it were from cloud to cloud,
still
affirming that he is bound heavenward;...
heave-offerings, n. (1)
SwM 4.135 21 The excess of [Hebraic] influence shows
itself [in
Swedenborg] in the incongruous importation of a foreign rhetoric. What
have I to do, asks the impatient reader, with...beryl and
chalcedony;...what
with heave-offerings and unleavened bread...
heavier, adj. (2)
Suc 7.310 17 Despondency comes readily enough to the
most sanguine. The cynic has only to follow their hint with his bitter
confirmation, and
they...go home with heavier step and premature age.
MMEm 10.426 18 Number the waste places of the
journey,-the secret
martyrdom of youth, heavier than the stake, I thought...and all are
sweetened by the purpose of Him I [Mary Moody Emerson] love.
heaviest, adj. (2)
ET5 5.85 23 In war, the Englishman looks to his means.
He is of the
opinion of Civilis...whom Tacitus reports as holding that the gods are
on the
side of the strongest;--a sentence which Bonaparte unconsciously
translated, when he said that he had noticed that Providence always
favored
the heaviest battalion.
Farm 7.148 6 In September, when the pears hang
heaviest...comes usually
a gusty day which...throws down the heaviest fruit in bruised heaps.
heaviest, adv. (1)
Farm 7.148 3 In September, when the pears hang
heaviest...comes usually
a gusty day which...throws down the heaviest fruit in bruised heaps.
heavily, adv. (4)
MoS 4.151 23 On the other part, the men of toil and
trade and luxury,--the
animal world...and the practical world...weigh heavily on the other
side.
Elo1 7.67 24 When each auditor...shudders...with fear
lest all will heavily
fail through one bad speech, mere energy and mellowness [in the orator]
are
then inestimable.
HDC 11.41 14 ...in the first years [of Concord], the
land would not pay the
necessary public charges, and they seem to have fallen heavily on the
few
wealthy planters.
CL 12.155 23 ...after having climbed the Alps, whilst I
[Linnaeus], a youth
of twenty-five years, was spent and tired...these two old [Lap] men,
one
fifty, one seventy years...felt none of the inconveniences of the road,
although they were both loaded heavily enough with my baggage.
heaviness, n. (1)
CL 12.155 10 ...says Linnaeus...as soon as I got upon
the Norway Alps I
seemed to have acquired a new existence. I felt as if relieved from a
heavy
burden. Then, spending a few days in the low country of Norway...my
languor or heaviness returned.
heaving, v. (2)
WD 7.175 7 ...that flexile clay of which these old
brothers moulded their
admirable symbols...was...the heat of the blood and the heaving of the
lungs;...
Schr 10.273 16 Other men are...heaving and carrying...
heavy, adj. (38)
AmS 1.93 9 ...the seer's hour of vision is short and
rare among heavy days
and months...
Chr1 3.105 2 How death-cold is literary genius before
this fire of life [character]! These are the touches that reanimate my
heavy soul...
NER 3.266 26 ...in a celebrated experiment, by
expiration and respiration
exactly together, four persons lift a heavy man from the ground by the
little
finger only...
MoS 4.151 2 In powerful moments, [the genius's] thought
has dissolved the
works of art and nature into their causes, so that the works appear
heavy
and faulty.
NMW 4.234 12 Sire, every regiment that approaches the
heavy artillery is
sacrificed: Sire, what orders?
NMW 4.235 2 The almost perpendicular fall of the heavy
projectiles
produced the desired effect.
NMW 4.240 20 When [Napoleon was] walking with Mrs.
Balcombe, some
servants, carrying heavy boxes, passed by on the road...
ET4 5.73 5 William the Conqueror being, says Camden,
better affected to
beasts than to men, imposed heavy fines and punishments on those that
should meddle with his game.
ET5 5.83 21 [The English] are heavy at the fine arts,
but adroit at the
coarse;...
ET5 5.88 13 Heavy fellows, steeped in beer and
fleshpots, [the English] are
hard of hearing and dim of sight.
Wth 6.102 8 The farmer's dollar is heavy and the
clerk's is light and
nimble;...
Wth 6.107 7 Your paper is not fine or coarse
enough,--is too heavy, or too
thin.
Ctr 6.153 23 'T is heavy odds/ Against the gods,/ When
they will match
with myrmidons./
Art2 7.50 23 ...in the moment or in the successive
moments when that form [of a work of art] was seen, the iron lids of
Reason were unclosed, which
ordinarily are heavy with slumber.
Elo1 7.95 6 We are slenderly furnished with anecdotes
of these men [Chatham, Pericles, Luther], nor can we help ourselves by
those heavy
books in which their discourses are reported.
Clbs 7.242 5 I have known persons of rare ability who
were heavy
company to good social men...
Clbs 7.242 7 I have known persons of rare ability
who...were heavy to
intellectual men who ought to have known them.
PI 8.59 8 To an exile on an island [Taliessin]
says,--The heavy blue chain
of the sea didst thou, O just man, endure.
SA 8.82 21 Intellectual men...are timid and heavy with
the elegant.
SA 8.83 22 There is the same difference between heavy
and genial manners
as between the perceptions of octogenarians and those of young girls
who
see everything in the twinkling of an eye.
Elo2 8.120 4 ...a man of this talent [of eloquence]
sometimes finds himself... perhaps a heavy companion;...
Elo2 8.126 23 ...it costs a great heat to enable a
heavy man to come up with
those who have a quick sensibility.
Comc 8.162 22 The victim who has just received the
discharge [of wit], if
in a solemn company, has the air very much of a stout vessel which has
just
shipped a heavy sea;...
Grts 8.320 5 ...people are as those with whom they
converse? And if all or
any are heavy to me, that fact accuses me.
Imtl 8.348 14 Here are people who cannot dispose of a
day; an hour hangs
heavy on their hands;...
Aris 10.44 11 ...the philosopher may well say, Let me
see his brain, and I
will tell you...whether he shall be a bungler, driveller, unlucky,
heavy and
tedious.
Edc1 10.132 18 Day creeps after day, each full of
facts...that we cannot
enough despise,-call heavy, prosaic and desert.
Plu 10.300 19 I do not know where to find a book-to
borrow a phrase of
Ben Jonson's-so rammed with life [as Plutarch], and this in chapters
chiefly ethical, which are so prone to be heavy and sentimental.
LLNE 10.331 8 If any of my readers were at that period
[1820] in Boston
or Cambridge, they will easily remember [Everett's] radiant beauty of
person...his heavy large eye, marble lids...
EWI 11.101 11 If the Virginian piques himself...on the
heavy Ethiopian
manners of his house-servants...I shall not refuse to show him that
when
their free-papers are made out, it will still be their interest to
remain on his
estate...
EPro 11.321 15 With this blot [slavery] removed from
our national honor, this heavy load lifted off the national heart, we
shall not fear henceforward
to show our faces among mankind.
SMC 11.364 17 [George Prescott writes] We only had
about twelve men... and some of them have their heavy knapsacks and
guns to carry...
Scot 11.467 5 With such a fortune and such a genius, we
should look to see
what heavy toll the Fates took of [Scott]...
PLT 12.7 21 A plain man finds [men of wit] so heavy,
dull, and
oppressive...that he comes to write in his tablets, Avoid the great man
as
one who is privileged to be an unprofitable companion.
Mem 12.97 26 A knife with a good spring, a
forceps...the teeth or jaws of
which fit and play perfectly, as compared with the same tools when
badly
put together, describe to us the difference between a person of quick
and
strong perception...and a heavy man who witnesses the same facts...
CL 12.155 7 ...says Linnaeus...as soon as I got upon
the Norway Alps I
seemed to have acquired a new existence. I felt as if relieved from a
heavy
burden.
CW 12.175 20 I could not find it in my heart to chide
the citizen who
should ruin himself to buy a patch of heavy oak timber.
EurB 12.371 14 The best songs in English poetry are by
that heavy, hard, pedantic poet, Ben Jonson.
heavy-armed, adj. (1)
Schr 10.286 25 Dissuade all you can from the lists [of
scholarship]. Sift the
wheat, frighten away the lighter souls. Let us keep only the
heavy-armed.
Hebraic, adj. (1)
SwM 4.121 2 [Swedenborg's] perception of nature...is
mystical and
Hebraic.
Hebraism, n. (2)
SwM 4.127 11 The book [Swedenborg's Conjugal Love] had
been grand if
the Hebraism had been omitted...
EzRy 10.395 17 ...in his old age, when all the antique
Hebraism and its
customs are passing away, it is fit that [Ezra Ripley] too should
depart...
Hebrew, adj. (19)
DSA 1.151 11 The Hebrew and Greek Scriptures contain
immortal
sentences...
LT 1.282 15 We do not find the same trait [of
perplexity] in the Arabian, in
the Hebrew...periods;...
Pt1 3.17 18 The piety of the Hebrew prophets purges
their grossness.
SwM 4.134 24 That Hebrew muse, which taught the lore of
right and
wrong to men, had the same excess of influence for [Swedenborg] it has
had for the nations.
ET11 5.173 8 ...the fair idea of a settled government
[in England] connecting itself...with the Hebrew religion and the
oldest traditions of the
world, was too pleasing a vision to be shattered by a few offensive
realities...
ET14 5.235 16 When the Gothic nations came into Europe
they found it
lighted with the sun and moon of Hebrew and of Greek genius.
Civ 7.33 1 The appearance of the Hebrew Moses, of the
Indian Buddh...are
casual facts which carry forward races to new convictions...
Elo1 7.71 7 ...every literature contains these high
compliments to the art of
the orator and the bard, from the Hebrew and the Greek down to the
Scottish Glenkindie...
WD 7.160 24 The old Hebrew king said, He makes the
wrath of man to
praise him.
Boks 7.218 13 After the Hebrew and Greek
Scriptures...[the sacred books] are, the Desatir of the Persians, and
the Zoroastrian Oracles;...
PI 8.35 1 'T is boyish in Swedenborg to cumber himself
with the dead scurf
of Hebrew antiquity...
Grts 8.313 26 The populace will say, with Horne Tooke,
If you would be
powerful, pretend to be powerful. I prefer to say, with the old Hebrew
prophet, Seekest thou great things?-seek them not;...
MoL 10.244 3 The Hebrew nation compensated for the
insignificance of its
members and territory by its religious genius...
LLNE 10.333 13 [Everett] abounded...even in a sort of
defying experiment
of his own wit and skill in giving an oracular weight to Hebrew or
Rabbinical words;...
EzRy 10.395 7 ...[Ezra Ripley]...appeared a modern
Israelite in his
attachment to the Hebrew history and faith.
TPar 11.287 9 ...I found some harshness in [Theodore
Parker's] treatment
both of Greek and of Hebrew antiquity...
PLT 12.42 26 The highest measure of poetic power is
such insight and
faculty to fuse the circumstances of to-day as shall make transparent
the
whole web of circumstance and opinion in which the man finds himself,
so
that he...no longer looks back to Hebrew or Greek or English use or
tradition in religion, laws or life...
Bost 12.194 24 These men [Christian writers] are a
bridge to us between
the unparalleled piety of the Hebrew epoch and our own.
Milt1 12.259 10 [Milton's] father's care, seconded by
his own endeavor, introduced him to a profound skill in all the
treasures of Latin, Greek, Hebrew and Italian tongues;...
Hebrew Law, n. (1)
MAng1 12.229 16 [Michelangelo's Moses]...is designed to
embody the
Hebrew Law.
Hebrew, n. (2)
Boks 7.197 16 It holds through all literature that our
best history is still
poetry. It is so in Hebrew, in Sanskrit and in Greek.
ACri 12.286 6 Luther said, I preach coarsely; that
giveth content to all. Hebrew, Greek and Latin I spare, until we
learned ones come together...
Hebrews, n. (3)
DSA 1.151 9 I look for the hour when that supreme Beauty
which ravished
the souls of those Eastern men, and chiefly of those Hebrews...shall
speak
in the West also.
ET13 5.229 20 George Borrow summons the Gypsies to hear
his discourse
on the Hebrews in Egypt...
Wom 11.414 17 ...in the East...in the Mohammedan faith,
Woman yet
occupies the same leading position, as a prophetess, that she
has...among
the Hebrews...
Hebrides, n. (1)
ET11 5.182 21 An agriculturist bought lately the island
of Lewes, in
Hebrides...
Hecate, n. (1)
Chr1 3.98 6 What have I gained, that I no longer
immolate...mouse to
Hecate;...
Hecateus of Abdera, n. (1)
Dem1 10.14 14 Let me add one more example of the same
good sense in a
story quoted out of Hecateus of Abdera...
hecatombs, n. (1)
Let 12.404 21 A literature...is the affair of a power
which works by a
prodigality of life and force very dismaying to behold,-every trait of
beauty purchased by hecatombs of private tragedy.
Hecla [Hekla], Mount, Icel (1)
ET10 5.162 18 Scandinavian Thor, who once forged his
bolts in icy Hecla... in England has advanced with the times...
Hector [Homer, Iliad], n. (4)
Comp 2.107 24 ...the belt which Ajax gave Hector dragged
the Trojan hero
over the fields at the wheels of the car of Achilles...
Comp 2.107 26 ...the sword which Hector gave Ajax was
that on whose
point Ajax fell.
Cour 7.271 22 Hector and Achilles...become aware that
they are nearer and
more alike than any other two...
Dem1 10.13 22 When Hector is told that the omens are
unpropitious, he
replies,-One omen is the best, to fight for one's country./
Hedge, Frederic Henry, n. (1)
LLNE 10.341 14 Margaret Fuller, George Ripley, Dr.
Convers Francis, Theodore Parker, Dr. Hedge, Mr. Brownson, James
Freeman Clarke, William H. Channing and many others, gradually drew
together...
hedge, n. (5)
Con 1.311 11 Would you have been born like a gipsy in a
hedge...
Wth 6.115 26 ...every hill of melons, row of corn, or
quick-set hedge [on a
man's land]...stand in his way...when he would go out of his gate.
SS 7.4 12 [My new friend] could not enough conceal
himself. Set a hedge
here; set oaks there...
WD 7.173 8 Hume's doctrine was...that the beggar
cracking fleas in the
sunshine under a hedge, and the duke rolling by in his chariot;...had
different means, but the same quantity of pleasant excitement.
Trag 12.410 2 [People with an appetite for grief]
handle every nettle and
ivy in the hedge...
hedge, v. (2)
Hist 2.5 27 ...we hedge [human life] round with
penalties and laws.
Wom 11.409 19 All these ceremonies that hedge our life
around are not to
be despised...
hedged, v. (1)
Nat2 3.187 1 The excess of fear with which the animal
frame is hedged
round...protects us...from some one real danger at last.
hedgehog, adj. (1)
Wom 11.411 7 ...how should we better measure the gulf
between the best
intercourse of men in old Athens, in London, or in our American
capitals,- between this and the hedgehog existence of diggers of worms,
and the
eaters of clay and offal,-than by signalizing just this department of
taste or
comeliness?
hedge-rows, n. (1)
ET16 5.288 25 There, in that great sloven continent
[America]...still sleeps
and murmurs and hides the great mother, long since driven away from the
trim hedge-rows and over-cultivated garden of England.
hedges, n. (2)
MMEm 10.409 14 ...from the highway hedges where I [Mary
Moody
Emerson] get lodging...I get a pleasing vision which is an earnest of
the
interminable skies where the mansions are prepared for the poor.
CL 12.146 21 Here [on Estabrook Farm], no hedges are
wanted;...
hedges, v. (2)
ShP 4.193 24 Shakspeare...esteemed the mass of old plays
waste stock, in
which any experiment could be freely tried. Had the prestige which
hedges
about a modern tragedy existed, nothing could have been done.
Ctr 6.162 25 Heaven sometimes hedges a rare character
about with
ungainliness and odium...
heed, n. (18)
Nat 1.31 20 The poet...bred in the woods...without
design and without
heed, - shall not lose their lesson altogether...
Nat 1.38 22 ...what good heed Nature forms in us!
LT 1.267 15 Slowly...it steals on us, the new fact,
that we who were pupils
or aspirants...do compose a portion of that head and heart we are wont
to
think worthy of all reverence and heed.
Con 1.324 8 Of the past [the hero] will take no
heed;...
Hist 2.18 10 The trivial experience of every day is
always...converting into
things the words and signs which we had heard and seen without heed.
Int 2.328 14 You cannot with your best deliberation and
heed come so
close to any question as your spontaneous glance shall bring you...
Int 2.331 20 ...a man explores the basis of civil
government. Let him intend
his mind without respite, without rest, in one direction. His best heed
long
time avails him nothing.
Int 2.347 1 ...[the Greek philosophers] add thesis to
thesis, without a
moment's heed of the universal astonishment of the human race below...
Mrs1 3.127 12 ...a fine sense of propriety is
cultivated with the more heed
that it becomes a badge of social and civil distinctions.
Gts 3.162 14 Brother, if Jove to thee a present make,/
Take heed that from
his hands thou nothing take./
Nat2 3.172 9 It seems as if the day was not wholly
profane in which we
have given heed to some natural object.
GoW 4.284 25 ...there is no weapon in the armory of
universal genius [Goethe] did not take into his hand, but with
peremptory heed that he
should not be for a moment prejudiced by his instruments.
Bty 6.288 1 We know [our friends] have intervals of
folly, whereof we take
no heed...
Civ 7.21 27 'T is wonderful how soon a piano gets into
a log hut on the
frontier. ... With it comes a Latin grammar,--and one of those tow-head
boys has written a hymn on Sunday. Now let colleges, now let senates
take
heed!...
Dem1 10.10 9 Every man goes through the world attended
with
innumerable facts prefiguring...his fate, if only eyes of sufficient
heed and
illumination were fastened on the sign.
Aris 10.46 16 ...it behooves a good man to walk with
tenderness and heed
amidst so much suffering.
Schr 10.283 4 Whosoever looks with heed into his
thoughts will find that
our science of the mind has not got far.
Milt1 12.261 13 We may even apply to [Milton's]
performance on the
instrument of language, his own description of music:-Notes, with many
a
winding bout/ Of linked sweetness long drawn out,/ With wanton heed and
giddy cunning,/ The melting voice through mazes running,/...
heed, v. (5)
SL 2.164 6 Let me heed my duties.
Exp 3.65 12 Life itself is...a sleep within a sleep.
Grant it, and as much
more as they will,--but thou, God's darling! heed thy private dream;...
GoW 4.266 3 ...there is a certain ridicule...thrown on
the scholars or
clerisy, which is of no import unless the scholar heed it.
WD 7.167 17 Hesiod wrote a poem which he called Works
and Days... instructing the husbandman...when to gather wood, when the
sailor might
launch his boat in security from storms, and what admonitions of the
planets he must heed.
PLT 12.29 21 ...every man is furnished, if he will heed
it, with wisdom
necessary to steer his own boat...
heeded, v. (4)
LE 1.166 26 The view I have taken of the resources of
the scholar, presupposes a subject as broad. ... We have not heeded the
invitation it
holds out.
ET14 5.256 23 ...the grave old [English] poets...heeded
their designs, and
less considered the finish.
Dem1 10.17 3 Heeded though [the belief in luck] be in
many actions and
partnerships, it is not the power to which we build churches...
PLT 12.55 19 The curses of malignity and despair are
important criticism, which must be heeded until [a man] can explain and
rightly silence them.
heedfully, adv. (1)
ET4 5.47 4 In race, it is not the broad shoulders, or
litheness, or stature that
give advantage, but a symmetry that reaches as far as to the wit. Then
the
miracle and renown begin. Then first we care to...copy heedfully the
training...
heeding, v. (1)
OS 2.283 24 Jesus, living in these moral sentiments
[truth, justice, love]... heeding only the manifestations of these,
never made the separation of the
idea of duration from the essence of these attributes...
heedless, adj. (13)
SR 2.67 16 ...man...heedless of the riches that surround
him, stands on
tiptoe to foresee the future.
OS 2.283 23 Jesus, living in these moral sentiments
[truth, justice, love], heedless of sensual fortunes...never made the
separation of the idea of
duration from the essence of these attributes...
CbW 6.263 12 I figure [sickness] as
a...phantom...heedless of what is good
and great...
Farm 7.141 20 ...the true abolitionist is the farmer,
who, heedless of laws
and constitutions, stands all day in the field...making a product with
which
no forced labor can compete.
Cour 7.270 9 Every creature has a courage of his
constitution fit for his
duties:--Archimedes, the courage of a geometer to stick to his diagram,
heedless of the siege and sack of the city;...
PPo 8.236 9 As Jelaleddin old and gray,/ [Saadi] seemed
to bask, to dream
and play/ Without remoter hope or fear/ Than still to entertain his
ear/ And
pass the burning summer-time/ In the palm-grove with a rhyme;/ Heedless
that each cunning word/ Tribes and ages overheard/...
Aris 10.32 20 It will not pain me...if it should turn
out, what is true, that I
am describing...a chapter of Templars...but so few, so heedless of
badges... that their names and doings are not recorded in any Book of
Peerage...
Chr2 10.113 3 Morals is the incorruptible essence, very
heedless in its
richness of any past teacher or witness...
Chr2 10.113 4 Morals is the incorruptible essence, very
heedless in its
richness of any past teacher or witness, heedless of their lives and
fortunes.
SovE 10.200 5 The word miracle, as it is used, only
indicates the ignorance
of the devotee...heedless of the stupendous fact of his own
personality.
FRep 11.521 20 The American marches with a careless
swagger to the
height of power, very heedless of his own liberty or of other
peoples'...
Let 12.395 8 One of the [letter] writers relentingly
says, What shall my
uncles and aunts do without me? and desires distinctly to be
understood...to
propose...to begin the enterprise of concentration by concentrating all
uncles and aunts in one delightful village by themselves!-so heedless
is
our correspondent of putting all the dough into one pan, and all the
leaven
into another.
Trag 12.407 2 The bitterest tragic element in life to
be derived from an
intellectual source is the belief in a brute Fate or Destiny; the
belief that the
order of Nature and events is controlled by a law...which holds on its
way
to the end...heedless whether it serves or crushes [man].
heedlessness, n. (1)
MN 1.221 21 Our health and reason as men need our
respect to this fact, against the heedlessness and against the
contradiction of society.
heeds, v. (2)
MN 1.205 4 Who heeds the waste abyss of possibility?
Pt1 3.32 12 If a man is inflamed and carried away by
his thought, to that
degree that he...heeds only this one dream which holds him like an
insanity, let me read his paper, and you may have all the arguments and
histories and
criticism.
heel, n. (5)
Comp 2.107 3 Achilles is not quite invulnerable; the
sacred waters did not
wash the heel by which Thetis held him.
MoS 4.175 27 We go...believing in the iron links of
Destiny, and will not
turn on our heel to save our life...
F 6.20 21 ...the gods in the Norse heaven were unable
to bind the Fenris
Wolf with steel or with the weight of mountains,-the one he snapped and
the other he spurned with his heel...
SovE 10.206 17 ...[the Orientals] will not turn on
their heel to avoid
famine, plague or the sword of the enemy.
CL 12.155 25 I [Linnaeus] saw [Lap] men more than
seventy years old put
their heel on their own neck, without any exertion.
heels, n. (4)
Hist 2.29 16 A great licentiousness treads on the heels
of a reformation.
Hsm1 2.249 10 A lock-jaw that bends a man's head back
to his heels; hydrophobia that makes him bark at his wife and
babes;...indicate a certain
ferocity in nature...
Mrs1 3.147 8 ...as we show beyond that Heaven and
Earth/ In form and
shape compact and beautiful;/ .../ So on our heels a fresh perfection
treads/...
LLNE 10.337 18 On the heels of this intruder
[Phrenology] came
Mesmerism...
Heeren, Arnold Hermann, n. (2)
Hist 2.19 23 The custom of making houses and tombs in
the living rock, says Heeren...determined very naturally the principal
character of the
Nubian Egyptian architecture to the colossal form which it assumed.
Elo1 7.99 6 To stand on one's own feet, Heeren finds
the key-note to the
discourses of Demosthenes...
Hegel, Georg Wilhelm, n. (9)
Int 2.343 24 A new doctrine seems at first a subversion
of all our opinions, tastes, and manner of living. Such has
Swedenborg...such has Hegel... seemed to many young men in this
country.
Chr1 3.104 1 ...it was droll in the good Riemer, who
has written memoirs
of Goethe, to make out a list of his donations and good deeds, as, so
many
hundred thalers given to Stilling, to Hegel, to Tischbein;...
F 6.39 22 The times, the age, what is that but a few
profound persons and a
few active persons who epitomize the times?--...Hegel...and the rest.
Clbs 7.238 23 The same thing took place when Leibnitz
came to visit
Newton;...when Hegel was the guest of Victor Cousin in Paris;...
Elo2 8.131 25 ...in Germany we have seen a metaphysical
zymosis
culminating in Kant, Schelling, Schleiermacher, Schopenhauer, Hegel,
and
so ending.
QO 8.180 22 Hegel preexists in Proclus...
Insp 8.292 8 Not Aristotle, not Kant or Hegel, but
conversation, is the right
metaphysical professor.
LLNE 10.328 25 In philosophy, Immanuel Kant has made
the best
catalogue of the human faculties and the best analysis of the mind.
Hegel
also, especially.
LLNE 10.338 20 Schelling and Oken introduced their
ideal natural
philosophy, Hegel his metaphysics...
Hegel's, Georg Wilhelm, n. (1)
ET14 5.242 12 In England these [generalizations]...do
all have a kind of
filial retrospect to Plato and the Greeks. Of this kind is...Hegel's
study of
civil history, as the conflict of ideas and the victory of the deeper
thought;...
hegira, n. (1)
OA 7.324 9 At fifty years, 't is said, afflicted
citizens lose their sick-headaches. I hope this hegira is not as
movable a feast as that one I annually
look for, when the horticulturists assure me that the rose-bugs in our
gardens disappear on the tenth of July;...
Heidelberg, Germany, n. (1)
GoW 4.276 22 ...[Goethe] flies at the throat of this imp
[the Devil]. He
shall be real;...he shall dress like a gentleman...and be well
initiated in the
life of Vienna and of Heidelberg in 1820...
heifer, n. (1)
SMC 11.360 16 [The Civil War soldiers] have to think
carefully of every
last resource at home on which their wives or mothers may fall back;
upon... the grass that can be sold, the old cow, or the heifer.
height, n. (59)
DSA 1.139 24 [The prayers and dogmas of our church] mark
the height to
which the waters once rose.
LT 1.267 5 How great were once Lord Bacon's dimensions!
he is now
reduced almost to the middle height;...
Tran 1.334 13 The height, the deity of man is to be
self-sustained...
Tran 1.352 22 ...in the space of an hour probably, I
was let down from this
height;...
Hist 2.11 3 ...we aim to master intellectually the
steps and reach the same
height or the same degradation that our fellow, our proxy has done.
SR 2.59 4 These varieties [in actions] are lost sight
of...at a little height of
thought.
SR 2.61 20 Scipio, Milton called the height of Rome;...
SR 2.85 26 There is no more deviation in the moral
standard than in the
standard of height or bulk.
SL 2.141 13 The height of the pinnacle is determined by
the breadth of the
base.
Fdsp 2.204 9 A friend...is a sort of paradox in nature.
I...who see nothing in
nature whose existence I can affirm with equal evidence to my own,
behold
now the semblance of my being, in all its height, variety and
curiosity, reiterated in a foreign form;...
Hsm1 2.255 20 It is a height to which common duty can
very well attain, to
suffer and to dare with solemnity.
Cir 2.307 5 The continual effort...to work a pitch
above his last height, betrays itself in a man's relations.
Art1 2.353 22 [Indian, Chinese and Mexican idols]
denote the height of the
human soul in that hour...
Pt1 3.19 16 ...no mountain is of any appreciable height
to break the curve
of the sphere.
Mrs1 3.120 3 Again, the Bornoos have no proper names;
individuals are
called after their height, thickness, or other accidental quality...
Nat2 3.174 2 Only as far as the masters of the world
have called in nature
to their aid, can they reach the height of magnificence.
Nat2 3.192 13 I have seen the softness and beauty of
the summer clouds
floating feathery overhead, enjoying, as it seemed, their height and
privilege of motion...
NR 3.237 6 We like to come to a height of land and see
the landscape...
UGM 4.16 7 Senates and sovereigns have no
compliment...like the
addressing to a human being thoughts out of a certain height, and
presupposing his intelligence.
SwM 4.97 25 Indeed, it takes/ From our achievements,
when performed at
height,/ The pith and marrow of our attribute./
ET1 5.9 16 Mr. Landor carries to its height the love of
freak which the
English delight to indulge...
ET6 5.108 23 The romance does not exceed the height of
noble passion in
Mrs. Lucy Hutchinson, or in Lady Russell, or even as one discerns
through
the plain prose of Pepys's Diary, the sacred habit of an English wife.
ET9 5.150 19 In a tract on Corn, a most
amiable...gentleman [William
Spence] writes thus:--Though Britain, according to Bishop Berkeley's
idea, were surrounded by a wall of brass ten thousand cubits in height,
still she
would as far excel the rest of the globe in riches, as she now does
both in
this secondary quality...
ET12 5.207 5 Greek erudition exists on the Isis and
Cam...the atmosphere
is loaded with Greek learning; the whole river has reached a certain
height...
ET14 5.254 6 [Natural science in England] stands in
strong contrast with
the genius of the Germans, those semi-Greeks, who...by means of their
height of view, preserve their enthusiasm and think for Europe.
F 6.19 14 I seemed in the height of a tempest to see
men overboard
struggling in the waves...
F 6.27 23 I know not whether there be...in the upper
region of our
atmosphere, a permanent westerly current which carries with it all
atoms
which rise to that height...
F 6.30 20 We stand against Fate, as children stand up
against the wall in
their father's house and notch their height from year to year.
Bty 6.296 8 [The human form] reaches its height in
woman.
Ill 6.313 1 ...in Boston, in San Francisco, the
carnival, the maquerade is at
its height.
Boks 7.209 14 This mania [for rare editions of books]
reached its height
about the beginning of the present century.
PI 8.60 10 There is in every poem a height which
attracts more than other
parts...
PI 8.65 26 The supreme value of poetry is to educate us
to a height beyond
itself...
Elo2 8.117 17 The special ingredients of this force [of
eloquence] are... logic; imagination...and then a grand will, which,
when legitimate and
abiding, we call character, the height of manhood.
Elo2 8.125 17 ...when [the orator] rises to any height
of thought or of
passion he comes down to a language level with the ear of all his
audience.
PC 8.213 23 ...each European nation...had its romantic
era, and the
productions of that era in each rose to about the same height.
PC 8.214 7 ...if these [romantic European] works still
survive and multiply, what shall we say of...names of men who have left
remains that certify a
height of genius in their several directions not since surpassed...
PC 8.229 18 ...when we see creation we also begin to
create. Depth of
character, height of genius, can only find nourishment in this soil.
PPo 8.250 13 ...if you mistake [Hafiz] for a low
rioter, he turns short on
you...to ejaculate with equal fire the most unpalatable affirmations of
heroic
sentiment and contempt for the world. Sometimes it is a glance from the
height of thought...
Dem1 10.21 20 The best are never demoniacal or
magnetic; leave this
limbo to the Prince of the power of the air. The lowest angel is
better. It is
the height of the animal; below the region of the divine.
Supl 10.171 20 Enthusiasm is the height of man;...
Supl 10.178 6 One of the meters of the height to which
any civility rose is
the skill in the fabric of iron.
SovE 10.194 22 Let [a man]...find...the height of
lowliness, the immensity
of to-day;...
SovE 10.205 19 I do not think the summit of this age
truly reached or
expressed unless it attain the height which religion and philosophy
reached
in any former age.
Thor 10.453 17 A natural skill for mensuration, growing
out of...his habit
of ascertaining the measures and distances of objects which interested
him... the height of mountains and the air-line distance of his
favorite summits,- this, and his intimate knowledge of the territory
about Concord, made [Thoreau] drift into the profession of
land-surveyor.
War 11.168 24 If you have a nation of men who have
risen to that height of
moral cultivation that they will not declare war or carry arms...you
have a
nation...of true, great and able men.
War 11.174 12 If peace is to be maintained, it must be
by brave men, who
have come up to the same height as the hero...
FSLN 11.236 13 ...our education is...to know...that
self-reliance, the height
and perfection of man, is reliance on God.
ACiv 11.304 1 ...the one [power] strong enough to bring
all the civility up
to the height of that which is best, prays now at the door of Congress
for
leave to move.
Wom 11.406 27 ...the general voice of mankind has
agreed...that the same
mental height which [women's] husbands attain by toil, they attain by
sympathy with their husbands.
Wom 11.413 7 The instincts of mankind have drawn the
Virgin Mother-
Created beings all in lowliness/ Surpassing, as in height above them
all./
Wom 11.413 11 This is the victory of Griselda, her
supreme humility. And
it is when love has reached this height that all our pretty rhetoric
begins to
have meaning.
Wom 11.414 6 There is much that tends to give [women] a
religious height
which men do not attain.
FRep 11.521 20 The American marches with a careless
swagger to the
height of power...
FRep 11.544 16 ...the height of reason, the noblest
affection...will find their
home in our institutions...
PLT 12.62 17 The height of culture, the highest
behavior, consists in the
identification of the Ego with the universe;...
CL 12.160 14 It does not need a barometer to find the
height of mountains. The line of snow is surer than the barometer;...
CW 12.171 18 ...I have a problem long waiting for an
engineer,-this-to
what height I must build a tower in my garden that shall show me the
Atlantic Ocean from its top-the ocean twenty miles away.
Milt1 12.274 6 ...by great knowledge, and by religion,
[Milton] would
reascend to the height from which our nature is supposed to have
descended.
Height, n. (1)
SR 2.70 7 We do not yet see that virtue is Height...
heighten, v. (1)
Mrs1 3.140 4 ...besides the general infusion of wit to
heighten civility, the
direct splendor of intellectual power is ever welcome in fine society
as the
costliest addition to its rule and its credit.
heightened, v. (3)
ET11 5.183 10 All over England...are the paradises of
the nobles, where the
livelong repose and refinement are heightened by the contrast with the
roar
of industry and necessity...
HDC 11.50 18 The interest of the Puritans in the
natives was heightened by
a suspicion at that time prevailing that these were the lost ten tribes
of Israel.
LVB 11.90 3 The interest always felt in the aboriginal
population...has been
heightened in regard to this tribe [Cherokee].
heightens, v. (2)
PI 8.23 12 Good poetry...heightens every species of
force in Nature...
Comc 8.171 8 ...among the women in the street, you
shall see one...wearing
withal an expression of meek submission to her bonnet and dress; and
another whose dress obeys and heightens the expression of her form.
Heights, Dorchester, Massac (1)
HDC 11.79 4 In March, 1776, 145 men were raised by this
town [Concord] to serve at Dorchester Heights.
heights, n. (15)
DSA 1.149 19 ...these are heights that we can scarce
remember...without
contrition and shame.
Cir 2.307 13 If [my friend] were high enough to slight
me, then could I... rise by my affection to new heights.
Mrs1 3.141 3 ...society demands in its patrician class
another element... which it significantly terms
good-nature,--expressing all degrees of
generosity, from the lowest willingness and faculty to oblige, up to
the
heights of magnanimity and love.
ET14 5.243 7 Such richness of genius had not existed
more than once
before [the Elizabethan age]. These heights could not be maintained.
ET14 5.243 13 These heights [of the Elizabethan age]
were followed by a
meanness and a descent of the mind into lower levels;...
Cour 7.275 20 We have little right in piping times of
peace to pronounce
on these rare heights of character;...
PC 8.211 19 We have been taught to tread familiarly on
giddy heights of
thought...
Insp 8.296 23 'T is the most difficult of tasks to
keep/ Heights which the
soul is competent to gain./
Imtl 8.348 24 ...the man puts off the ignorance and
tumultuous passions of
youth; proceeding thence puts off the egotism of manhood, and becomes
at
last a public and universal soul. He is rising to greater heights...
Supl 10.163 6 ...it is a long way from the Maine Law to
the heights of
absolute self-command...
SovE 10.198 19 ...I see not why to these simple
instincts, simple yet grand, all the heights and transcendencies of
virtue and of enthusiasm are not open.
MAng1 12.224 7 [Michelangelo] visited Bologna to
inspect its celebrated
fortifications, and, on his return, constructed a fortification on the
heights of
San Miniato...
Milt1 12.278 14 [Milton's plea for freedom of divorce]
was a sally of the
extravagant spirit of the time...eager to carry on the standard of
truth to new
heights.
Milt1 12.279 10 ...are not all men fortified by the
remembrance of...the
angelic devotion of this man [Milton], who,...endeavored...to carry out
the
life of man to new heights of spiritual grace and dignity...
WSL 12.342 23 Certainly there are heights in Nature
which command
this;...
Heimskringla [Snorri Sturlu (4)
ET4 5.57 1 The Heimskringla, or Sagas of the Kings of
Norway, collected
by Snorro Sturleson, is the Iliad and Odyssey of English history.
ET4 5.66 21 ...the Heimskringla has frequent occasion
to speak of the
personal beauty of its heroes.
ET8 5.139 24 The following passage from the
Heimskringla might almost
stand as a portrait of the modern Englishman...
Boks 7.206 22 [The scholar] can look back for the
legends and mythology
to the Younger Edda and the Heimskringla of Snorro Sturleson...
Heines, n. (1)
Chr2 10.105 26 Varnhagen von Ense, writing in Prussia in
1848, says: The
Gospels belong to the most aggressive writings. No leaf thereof could
attain
the liberty of being printed (in Berlin) to-day. What...Diderots,
Fichtes, Heines, and many another heretic, one can detect therein!
heinously, adv. (1)
Res 8.145 20 Malus...was captain of a corps of engineers
in Bonaparte's
Egyptian campaign, which was heinously unprovided and exposed.
heir, n. (5)
MR 1.236 27 The advantage of riches remains with him who
procured
them, not with the heir.
ShP 4.197 11 Each romancer was heir and dispenser of
all the hundred tales
of the world...
ET5 5.93 22 [The English] are a family to which a
destiny attaches, and the
Banshee has sworn that a male heir shall never be wanting.
Ctr 6.165 2 ...in an old community a well-born
proprietor is usually found... to feel a habitual desire that the
estate...shall be delivered down to the next
heir in as good condition as he received it;...
MMEm 10.424 12 Hail requiem of departed Time! Never was
incumbent's
funeral followed by expectant heir with more satisfaction.
heirlooms, n. (1)
ET6 5.107 24 ...with the national tendency to sit fast
in the same spot for
many generations, [the Englishman's house] comes to be, in the course
of
time, a museum of heirlooms...
Heister, Lorenz, n. (1)
SwM 4.104 23 Unrivalled dissectors,
Swammerdam...Heister...had left
nothing for scalpel or microscope to reveal in human or comparative
anatomy...
Hekla [Hecla], Mount, Icel (1)
ET10 5.162 18 Scandinavian Thor, who once forged his
bolts in icy Hecla... in England has advanced with the times...
held, v. (103)
MN 1.207 16 [Man's] two parents held each of them one of
the wants...
SR 2.78 25 We solicitously and apologetically caress
and celebrate [the self-helping
man] because he held on his way...
SR 2.87 4 The Emperor held it impossible to make a
perfect army, says Las
Casas, without abolishing our arms...
Comp 2.107 3 Achilles is not quite invulnerable; the
sacred waters did not
wash the heel by which Thetis held him.
SL 2.145 18 All the terrors of the French Republic,
which held Austria in
awe, were unable to command her diplomacy.
Int 2.333 12 [A person I knew] held the old; he holds
the new;...
Art1 2.353 16 ...the artist's pen or chisel seems to
have been held and
guided by a gigantic hand...
Pt1 3.35 4 Either of these [symbols], or of a myriad
more, are equally good
to the person to whom they are significant. Only they must be held
lightly...
Pt1 3.35 25 When some of [Swedenborg's] angels affirmed
a truth, the
laurel twig which they held blossomed in their hands.
Mrs1 3.149 15 I have seen an individual whose manners,
though wholly
within the conventions of elegant society, were...original and
commanding, and held out protection and prosperity;...
NER 3.274 20 The heroes of ancient and modern
fame...have treated life
and fortune as a game to be well and skilfully played, but the stake
not to be
so valued but that any time it could be held as a trifle light as
air...
SwM 4.102 1 ...[Swedenborg's] books on mines and metals
are held in the
highest esteem by those who understand these matters.
SwM 4.106 23 ...[Swedenborg] held...that the wiser a
man is, the more will
he be a worshipper of the Deity.
SwM 4.106 27 ...[Swedenborg] was a believer in the
Identity-philosophy, which he held not idly...
SwM 4.118 23 In his fifty-fourth year these thoughts
[about
Correspondence] held [Swedenborg] fast...
SwM 4.132 24 Genius is ever haunted by similar dreams
[to those of
Swedenborg], when the hells and the heavens are opened to it. But these
pictures are to be held as mystical...
SwM 4.143 15 ...[Swedenborg] could never break the
umbilical cord which
held him to nature...
ShP 4.202 2 ...[the antiquaries] have left no bookstall
unsearched...so keen
was the hope to discover whether the boy Shakspeare poached or not,
whether he held horses at the theatre door...
NMW 4.242 9 ...a man of [the French people] held, in
the Tuileries, knowledge and ideas like their own...
ET3 5.42 26 Nature held counsel with herself and said,
My Romans are
gone. To build my new empire, I will choose a rude race, all masculine,
with brutish strength.
ET4 5.48 6 The French in Canada...have held their
national traits.
ET4 5.49 10 'T is said that the views of nature held by
any people
determine all their institutions.
ET10 5.170 12 ...being in the fault, [England] has the
misfortune of
greatness to be held as the chief offender.
ET10 5.170 13 England must be held responsible for the
despotism of
expense.
ET11 5.174 4 The Norwegian pirate got what he could and
held it for his
eldest son.
ET11 5.175 9 ...I make no doubt that...baron, knight
and tenant often had
their memories refreshed, in regard to the service by which they held
their
lands.
ET11 5.175 26 ...the duel, which in peace still held
[French and English
nobles] to the risks of war, diminished the envy that in trading and
studious
nations would else have pried into their title.
ET13 5.217 6 [The English Church]...has coupled itself
with the almanac, that no court can be held, no field ploughed, no
horse shod, without some
leave from the church.
ET14 5.239 13 Bacon, in the structure of his mind, held
of the analogists...
ET14 5.240 9 [Bacon] held this element [prima
philosophia] essential...
ET15 5.268 9 The [London] Times never...cripples itself
by apology for... the indiscretion of him who held the pen.
ET17 5.297 13 [A London gentleman] said he once showed
[Milton's
watch] to Wordsworth, who took it in one hand, then drew out his own
watch and held it up with the other, before the company...
ET18 5.299 10 ...[the English] have earned their
vantage ground and held it
through ages of adverse possession.
F 6.5 22 [The Calvinists] felt that the weight of the
Universe held them
down to their place.
F 6.20 23 When the gods in the Norse heaven were unable
to bind the
Fenris Wolf with steel...they put round his foot a limp band...and this
held
him;...
F 6.24 3 ...the dogma [of Fate] makes a different
impression when it is held
by the weak and lazy.
Wth 6.102 5 I wish the farmer held [the dollar] dearer,
and would spend it
only for real bread;...
Bhr 6.174 5 Charles Dickens self-sacrificingly
undertook the reformation
of our American manners in unspeakable particulars. I think the
lesson... held bad manners up, so that the churls could see the
deformity.
Bhr 6.176 3 When [the old Massachusetts statesman] sat
down, after
speaking, he...held on to his chair with both hands...
Wsp 6.208 13 After [the people's] pepper-corn aims are
gained, it seems as
if the lime in their bones alone held them together...
Wsp 6.210 9 What proof of skepticism like the base rate
at which the
highest mental and moral gifts are held?
Wsp 6.222 9 In a new nation and language, [the
countryman's] sect...is
lost. ... He misses...the commanding eye of his neighborhood, which
held
him to decorum.
Ill 6.315 5 ...I have known gentlemen of great stake in
the community...who
held themselves bound to sign every temperance pledge...
Ill 6.319 3 We are coming on the secret of a magic
which sweeps out of
men's minds all vestige of theism and beliefs which they and their
fathers
held and were framed upon.
Civ 7.33 18 ...a purer morality...casts backward all
that we held sacred into
the profane...
Elo1 7.72 20 ...when the wise Ulysses arose and
stood...and neither moved
his sceptre backward nor forward, but held it still...you would say it
was
some angry or foolish man;...
Farm 7.143 25 The eternal rocks...have held their
oxygen or lime
undiminished...
WD 7.162 5 Our selfishness would have held slaves...
Boks 7.219 14 [The communications of the sacred books]
are not to be held
by letters printed on a page...
Clbs 7.243 26 Dr. Bentley's Club held Newton, Wren,
Evelyn and Locke;...
Cour 7.255 20 ...the immense esteem in which [courage]
is held proves it
to be rare.
Cour 7.270 23 [John Brown] held the belief that courage
and chastity are
silent concerning themselves.
Cour 7.272 21 The best act of the marvellous genius of
Greece was...in the
instinct which, at Thermopylae, held Asia at bay...
Suc 7.300 2 ...the sand floor is held by spheral
gravity...
OA 7.321 6 A man of great employments and excellent
performance used
to assure me that he did not think a man worth anything until he was
sixty; although this smacks a little of the resolution of a certain
Young Men's
Republican Club, that all men should be held eligible who are under
seventy.
OA 7.321 8 ...in all governments, the councils of power
were held by the
old;...
PI 8.69 23 ...our English nature and genius has made us
the worst critics of
Goethe,--We, who speak the tongue/ That Shakspeare spake, the faith and
manners hold/ Which Milton held./
Res 8.149 21 ...the guide kindled a Roman candle, and
held it here and
there shooting its fireballs successively into each crypt of the
groined roof [of the Mammoth Cave]...
Comc 8.166 12 ...The mighty Tottipottymoy/ Sent to our
elders an envoy,/ Complaining loudly of the breach/ Of league held
forth by Brother Patch/...
Imtl 8.324 20 There never was a time when the doctrine
of a future life was
not held.
Imtl 8.332 12 Slowly [the two men]...at last met,-said
nothing, but shook
hands long and cordially. At last his friend said, Any light, Albert?
None, replied Albert. Any light, Lewis? None, replied he. They...gave
one more
shake each to the hand he held...
Aris 10.32 5 A reference to society is part of the idea
of culture; science of
a gentleman; art of a gentleman; poetry in a gentleman: intellectually
held, that is, for their own sake...
PerF 10.74 10 If a straw be held still in the direction
of the ocean-current, the sea will pour through it as through
Gibraltar.
Chr2 10.106 20 ...'t is incredible to us, if we look
into the religious books
of our grandfathers, how they held themselves in such a pinfold.
Supl 10.167 2 Doctor Channing's piety and wisdom had
such weight that, in Boston, the popular idea of religion was whatever
this eminent divine
held.
Supl 10.176 4 The old and the modern sages of clearest
insight are plain
men, who have held themselves hard to the poverty of Nature.
MoL 10.250 16 The ambassador is held to maintain the
dignity of the
Republic which he represents.
Plu 10.314 1 To [Plutarch] the Epicureans are hateful,
who held that the
soul perishes when it is separated from the body.
Plu 10.319 10 If Plutarch...held the balance between
the severe Stoic and
the indulgent Epicurean, his humanity shines not less in his
intercourse with
his personal friends.
LLNE 10.343 13 From that time meetings were held for
conversation...
LLNE 10.346 19 ...Robert Owen...read lectures or held
conversations
wherever he found listeners;...
LLNE 10.355 5 As soon as our people got wind of the
doctrine of Marriage
held by this master [Fourier], it would fall at once into the hands of
a
lawless crew...
LLNE 10.359 24 Many members [of Brook Farm] took shares
by paying
money, others held shares by their labor.
LLNE 10.362 19 I recall one youth...I believe I must
say the subtlest
observer and diviner of character I ever met, living, reading, writing,
talking there [at Brook Farm], perhaps as long as the colony held
together;...
EzRy 10.384 3 [Ezra Ripley] and his
contemporaries...were believers in
what is called a particular providence,-certainly, as they held it, a
very
particular providence......
EzRy 10.388 11 I can remember a little speech [Ezra
Ripley] made to me, when the last tie of blood which held me and my
brothers to his house was
broken by the death of his daughter.
MMEm 10.421 24 ...a few lamps held out in the firmament
enable us to
talk of Time...
MMEm 10.421 27 ...a few lamps held out in the firmament
enable us...to
date the revelations of God to man. But these lamps are held to measure
out
some of the moments of eternity...
Thor 10.458 18 [Thoreau] coldly and fully stated his
opinion without
affecting to believe that it was the opinion of the company. It was of
no
consequence if every one present held the opposite opinion.
Thor 10.475 7 [Thoreau] was so enamoured of the
spiritual beauty that he
held all actual written poems in very light esteem in the comparison.
LS 11.23 25 ...I have proposed to the brethren of the
Church to drop the use
of the elements and the claim of authority in the administration of
this
ordinance [the Lord's Supper], and have suggested a mode in which a
meeting for the same purpose might be held, free of objection.
HDC 11.45 15 The bands of love and reverence, held fast
the little state [the Massachusetts Bay Colony]...
HDC 11.53 15 We, who see in the squalid remnants of the
twenty tribes of
Massachusetts...can hardly learn without emotion the earnestness with
which the most sensible individuals of the copper race held on to the
new
hope they had conceived...
HDC 11.72 8 In January, 1775, a meeting was held [in
Concord] for the
enlisting of minute-men.
EWI 11.111 5 Looking in the face of his master by the
negro was held to
be violence by the [West Indian] island courts.
War 11.160 9 [The human race] have nearly exhausted all
the good and all
the evil of this [first brutish] form: they have held as fast to this
degradation
as their worst enemy could desire;...
FSLC 11.191 6 Lord Coke held that where an Act of
Parliament is against
common right and reason, the common law shall control it...
FSLC 11.191 11 Lord Coke held that where an Act of
Parliament is against
common right and reason, the common law shall control it, and adjudge
it
to be void. Chief Justice Hobart, Chief Justice Holt, and Chief Justice
Mansfield held the same.
TPar 11.290 22 By the incessant power of his statement,
[Theodore Parker] made and held a party.
ACiv 11.303 21 It looks as if we held the fate of the
fairest possession of
mankind in our hands...
SMC 11.370 24 Being informed that he misunderstood the
order, which
was only to inform him how to retire when it became necessary, [George
Prescott] was satisfied, and he and his command held their ground
manfully.
SMC 11.374 4 At Dabney's Mills...[the Thirty-second
Regiment] lost
seventy-four killed, wounded and missing. Here Major Shepard was taken
prisoner. The lines were held until the tenth...
ChiE 11.472 22 When Socrates heard that the oracle
declared that he was
the wisest of men, he said, it must mean that other men held that they
were
wise, but that he knew that he knew nothing.
FRep 11.538 13 It is not a question whether we shall be
a multitude of
people. No...but whether we shall be...the guide and lawgiver of all
nations, as having clearly chosen and firmly held the simplest and best
rule of
political society.
PLT 12.40 26 ...a thought, properly speaking,-that is a
truth held not from
any man's saying so...is of inestimable value.
II 12.78 19 ...[the writer]...should write nothing that
will not help
somebody,-as I knew of a good man who held conversations, and wrote
on the wall, that every person might speak to the subject, but no
allusion
should be made to the opinions of other speakers;...
Mem 12.93 23 We figure [memory] as if the mind were a
kind of looking-glass, which being carried through the street of time
receives on its clear
plate every image that passes; only with this difference, that our
plate is
iodized so that every image sinks into it, and is held there.
Mem 12.106 17 [The bright school-girl's] is a
bushel-basket memory of all
unchosen knowledge, heaped together in a huge hamper, without method,
yet securely held, and ready to come at call;...
Mem 12.109 19 If we occupy ourselves long on this
wonderful faculty [memory], and see...the way in which new knowledge
calls upon old
knowledge...so that what one had painfully held by strained attention
and
recapitulation now falls into place...we cannot fail to draw thence a
sublime
hint that thus there must be an endless increase in the power of memory
only through its use;...
CL 12.143 6 The light which resides in [Wordsworth's
eyes]...under
favorable accidents...is more truly entitled to be held the light that
never
was on land or sea...
CL 12.146 13 In old towns there are always certain
paradises known to the
pedestrian, old and deserted farms, where the neglected orchard has
been
left to itself, and whilst some of its trees decay, the hardier have
held their
own.
CL 12.150 27 The mallows the Greeks held sacred as
giving the first sign
of the sympathy of the earth with the celestial influences.
Let 12.397 4 The loneliest man, after twenty years,
discovers that he stood
in a circle of friends, who will then show like a close fraternity held
by
some masonic tie.
heldest, v. (1)
WD 7.175 8 ...that flexile clay of which these old
brothers moulded their
admirable symbols...was that clay which thou heldest but now in thy
foolish
hands...
Helen [Goethe, Helena], n. (1)
Hist 2.33 17 These figures, [Goethe] would say, these
Chirons, Griffins, Phorkyas, Helen and Leda, are somewhat, and do exert
a specific influence
on the mind.
Helen [Homer, Iliad], n. (2)
Elo1 7.71 18 Helen is pointing out to Priam...the
different Grecian chiefs.
Elo1 7.71 27 [Priam] answered Helen, daughter of Jove,
This is the wise
Ulysses...
Helen, of Argos, n. [Helen] (2)
PPh 4.41 3 ...they say that Helen of Argos had that
universal beauty that
every body felt related to her...
Bty 6.297 20 ...why need we console ourselves with the
fames of Helen of
Argos, or Corinna...
Helena [Johann Wolfgang von (3)
Hist 2.33 14 See in Goethe's Helena the same desire that
every word
should be a thing.
NR 3.242 7 After taxing Goethe as a courtier...I took
up this book of
Helena, and found him an Indian of the wilderness...
GoW 4.271 27 [Goethe's] Helena...is a philosophy of
literature set in
poetry;...
Helena, St., n. (6)
LE 1.159 9 Every presentiment of the mind is executed
somewhere in a
gigantic fact. What else is Greece, Rome, England, France, St. Helena?
NMW 4.240 2 Those who had to deal with him found that
[Bonaparte]... could cipher as well as another man. This appears in all
parts of his
Memoirs, dictated at St. Helena.
NMW 4.240 18 I like an incident mentioned by one of
[Napoleon's] biographers at St. Helena.
NMW 4.251 2 Of medicine too [Bonaparte] was fond of
talking, and with
those of its practitioners whom he most esteemed...with Antonomarchi at
St. Helena.
NMW 4.251 16 [Bonaparte's] memoirs, dictated to Count
Montholon and
General Gourgaud at St. Helena, have great value...
Trag 12.416 13 Napoleon said to one of his friends at
St. Helena, Nature
seems to have calculated that I should have great reverses to endure,
for she
has given me a temperament like a block of marble.
Heliodorus, Angel driving... (1)
Comc 8.170 24 In Raphael's Angel driving Heliodorus from
the Temple, the crest of the helmet is so remarkable, that but for the
extraordinary
energy of the face, it would draw the eye too much;...
hell, n. (17)
DSA 1.123 23 ...of their own volition, souls proceed
into heaven, into hell.
Cir 2.318 6 ...no evil is pure, nor hell itself without
its extreme satisfactions.
Exp 3.55 1 The intellect, seeker of absolute truth, or
the heart, lover of
absolute good, intervenes for our succor, and at one whisper of these
high
powers we awake from ineffectual struggles with this nightmare [of
science]. We hurl it into its own hell...
NER 3.274 15 ...Rousseau...Byron...they would know the
worst, and tread
the floors of hell.
SwM 4.131 14 ...a bird does not more readily weave its
nest...than this seer
of the souls [Swedenborg] substructs a new hell and pit...round every
new
crew of offenders.
SwM 4.131 23 [Swedenborg] was let down through a column
that...was
formed of angelic spirits, that he might descend safely amongst the
unhappy, and witness the vastation of souls and hear there...their
lamentations;...he saw the hell of the jugglers, the hell of the
assassins...
SwM 4.131 24 [Swedenborg] was let down through a column
that...was
formed of angelic spirits, that he might descend safely amongst the
unhappy, and witness the vastation of souls and hear there...their
lamentations;...he saw...the hell of the lascivious;...
SwM 4.131 24 [Swedenborg] was let down through a column
that...was
formed of angelic spirits, that he might descend safely amongst the
unhappy, and witness the vastation of souls and hear there...their
lamentations;...he saw...the hell of robbers, who kill and boil men;...
SwM 4.131 26 ...[Swedenborg] saw...the hell of the
revengeful...
SwM 4.137 26 ...one [man] dreads hell,--show him that
dread is evil.
NMW 4.250 12 In 1806 [Napoleon] conversed with
Fournier, bishop of
Montpellier, on matters of theology. There were two points on which
they
could not agree, viz. that of hell, and that of salvation out of the
pale of the
church.
ET14 5.242 11 In England these [generalizations]...do
all have a kind of
filial retrospect to Plato and the Greeks. Of this kind is...the theory
of
Swedenborg...that the man makes his heaven and hell;...
Bhr 6.193 21 It is related by the monk Basle, that
being excommunicated
by the Pope, he was, at his death, sent in charge of an angel, to find
a fit
place of suffering in hell;...
Bhr 6.194 7 ...such was the contented spirit of the
monk [Basle] that he
found something to praise in every place and company, though in hell...
PC 8.232 1 [Strong men] wish, as Pindar said, to tread
the floors of hell...
MMEm 10.421 5 There was great truth in what a pious
enthusiast said, that, if God should cast him into hell, he would yet
clasp his hands around
Him.
ACri 12.290 6 Dante is the professor that shall teach
both the noble low
style, the power of working up all his experience into heaven and hell;
also
the sculpture of compression.
Hell, n. (4)
LT 1.261 23 ...Dante and Milton painted in colossal
their platoons, and
called them Heaven and Hell.
Pow 6.66 16 ...in representations of the Deity,
painting, poetry, and popular
religion have ever drawn the wrath from Hell.
Elo1 7.61 14 One man is brought to the boiling-point by
the excitement of
conversation in the parlor. ... ...and a fifth [needs] nothing less
than...the
splendors and shades of Heaven and Hell.
ACri 12.283 16 ...Heaven, Hell, power, science, the
Neant, exist to [the
writer] as colors for his brush.
Hellas, n. (1)
Hist 2.26 16 A person of childlike genius and inborn
energy is still a Greek, and revives our love of the Muse of Hellas.
hellebore, n. (2)
NR 3.238 13 ...[Nature] has hellebore at the bottom of
the cup.
ACiv 11.298 10 ...who is this who tosses his empty head
at this blessing in
disguise...and insults the faithful workman at his daily toil? I see
for such
madness no hellebore...
hellebores, n. (1)
Schr 10.266 5 ...[Nature] has balsams for our hurts, and
hellebores for our
insanities.
Hellenic, adj. (1)
Comp 2.108 17 Phidias it is not, but the work of man in
that early Hellenic
world that I would know.
Hellespont, n. (1)
ET16 5.277 14 It was pleasant to see
that...[Stonehenge]--two upright
stones and a lintel laid across...were like what is most permanent on
the
face of the planet: these, and the barrows,--mere mounds...like the
same
mound on the plain of Troy, which still makes good to the passing
mariner
on Hellespont, the vaunt of Homer...
Hellesponts, n. (1)
Pow 6.69 11 ...when [the young English] have no wars to
breathe their
riotous valors in, they seek for travels as dangerous as war...swimming
Hellesponts;...
hell-fire, n. (1)
F 6.20 26 Neither brandy...nor hell-fire...can get rid
of this limp band [of
Fate].
hells, n. (6)
SwM 4.131 26 ...[Swedenborg] saw...the excrementitious
hells;...
SwM 4.132 22 Genius is ever haunted by similar dreams
[to those of
Swedenborg], when the hells and the heavens are opened to it.
SwM 4.134 5 [Swedenborg's] heavens and hells are
dull;...
SwM 4.142 14 Strange, scholastic, didactic,
passionless, bloodless man [Swedenborg], who...visits doleful hells as
a stratum of chalk or hornblende!
Ctr 6.166 19 [Man] will convert the Furies into Muses,
and the hells into
benefit.
CbW 6.255 11 What would painter do...but for
crucifixions and hells?
helm, n. (3)
Cir 2.303 24 ...[a man] has a helm which he obeys...
ALin 11.335 7 ...what an occasion was the whirlwind of
the war. Here was
place for...no fair-weather sailor; the new pilot was hurried to the
helm in a
tornado.
FRep 11.543 22 Our helm is given up to a better
guidance than our own;...
helmet, n. (3)
WD 7.184 25 Mars shook the lots in his helmet, and that
of Apollo leaped
out first.
Comc 8.170 25 In Raphael's Angel driving Heliodorus
from the Temple, the crest of the helmet is so remarkable, that but for
the extraordinary
energy of the face, it would draw the eye too much;...
MAng1 12.237 25 ...Michael [Angelo] was accustomed to
work at night
with a pasteboard cap or helmet on his head, into which he stuck a
candle...
helmets, n. (1)
Cour 7.264 25 ...the...shining helmets, beard and
moustache of the soldier
have conquered you long before his sword or bayonet reaches you.
Helmont, Jan Baptista van, (4)
ET14 5.241 21 A few generalizations always circulate in
the world...and
these are in the world constants, like the Copernican and Newtonian
theories in physics. In England these may be traced usually to
Shakspeare, Bacon, Milton, or Hooker, even to Van Helmont and Behmen...
PC 8.228 25 It was the conviction...of Van
Helmont...that piety is an
essential condition of science...
Imtl 8.340 23 ...Van Helmont...drew his sufficient
proof [of immortality] purely from the action of the intellect.
CInt 12.131 19 Study for eternity smiled on me, says
Van Helmont.
helmsman, n. (1)
FRep 11.543 24 ...the course of events is quite too
strong for any
helmsman...
help, n. (29)
AmS 1.113 22 Help must come from the bosom alone.
MR 1.245 10 Now what help for these evils?
MR 1.253 4 Let any two matrons meet, and observe how
soon their
conversation turns on the troubles from their "help,", as our phrase
is.
Lov1 2.182 22 In the particular society of his mate
[the lover] attains a
clearer sight of any spot, any taint which her beauty has contracted
from
this world, and is able to point it out, and this with mutual joy that
they are
now able, without offence, to...give to each all help and comfort in
curing [blemishes and hindrances].
Exp 3.58 8 ...what help from these fineries or
pedantries?
Exp 3.58 9 What help from thought?
Chr1 3.112 2 ...if we could abstain from asking
anything of [men], from
asking their praise, or help, or pity, and content us with compelling
them
through the virtue of the eldest laws!
NR 3.233 11 I read Proclus...for a mechanical help to
the fancy and the
imagination.
UGM 4.13 21 Men are helpful through the intellect and
the affections. Other help I find a false appearance.
UGM 4.27 7 Ah! yonder in the horizon is our
help;--other great men...
ET9 5.150 5 [The English] have no curiosity about
foreigners, and answer
any information you may volunteer with Oh, Oh! until the informant
makes
up his mind that they shall die in their ignorance, for any help he
will offer.
Pow 6.78 17 The rule for hospitality and Irish 'help'
is to have the same
dinner every day throughout the year.
Wth 6.120 21 Help comes in the custom of the country...
Ctr 6.140 15 There are people who...remain literalists,
after hearing the
music and poetry and rhetoric and wit of seventy or eighty years. They
are
past the help of surgeon or clergy.
Bty 6.284 11 The invention is of use to the inventor,
of questionable help to
any other.
Elo1 7.99 20 [Eloquence's] great masters, whilst they
valued every help to
its attainment...resembling the Arabian warrior of fame, who wore
seventeen weapons in his belt, and in personal combat used them all
occasionally.--yet subordinated all means;...
Cour 7.260 22 ...the only title I can have to your help
is when I have
manfully put forth all the means I possess to keep me...
PI 8.9 13 ...[all things in Nature's] growths, decays,
quality and use so
curiously resemble [the student], in parts and in wholes, that he is
compelled to speak by means of them. His words and his thoughts are
framed by their help.
PI 8.10 27 [Goethe] was himself conscious of
[imagination's] help...
Chr2 10.118 5 The power that in other times
inspired...the modern revivals, flies to the help of the deaf-mute and
the blind...
Carl 10.497 6 Czar Nicholas was [Carlyle's] hero; for
in the ignominy of
Europe...one man remained who believed he was put there by God
Almighty to govern his empire, and, by the help of God, had resolved to
stand there.
GSt 10.502 18 Mr. [George] Stearns...had the
magnanimity to trust [John
Brown] entirely, and to arm his hands with all needed help.
EWI 11.145 1 ...you must save yourself, black or white,
man or woman; other help is none.
FSLC 11.182 24 ...[the crisis over the Fugitive Slave
Law] showed...how
competent we are to give counsel and help in a day of trial.
FSLC 11.212 1 The ancient maxim still holds that never
was any injustice
effected except by the help of justice.
FSLN 11.234 20 There is no help but in the head and
heart and hamstrings
of a man.
SMC 11.368 6 How would Concord people, [George
Prescott] asks, like to
pass the night on the battle-field, and hear the dying cry for help,
and not be
able to go to them.
Scot 11.466 9 In his own household and neighbors
[Scott] found characters
and pets of humble class...came with these into real ties of mutual
help and
good will.
PPr 12.384 18 It is plain that...all the great classes
of English society must
read [Carlyle's Past and Present], even those whose existence it
proscribes. Poor Queen Victoria...poor Primates and Bishops,-poor Dukes
and Lords! There is no help in place or pride...
help, v. (94)
AmS 1.113 21 ...no man in God's wide earth is either
willing or able to
help any other man.
DSA 1.123 13 ...speak the truth, and all nature and all
spirits help you with
unexpected furtherance.
MN 1.202 12 ...one can hardly help asking if this
planet is a fair specimen
of the so generous astronomy...
MR 1.239 27 ...we have now a puny, protected person,
guarded by walls
and curtains...who...is forced to spend so much time in guarding them,
that
he has quite lost sight of their original use, namely, to help him to
his ends...
MR 1.255 18 He who would help himself and others should
not be a
subject of irregular and interrupted impulses of virtue...
Con 1.311 8 Have we not atoned for this small offence
(which we could not
help) of leaving you no right in the soil, by this splendid indemnity
of
ancestral and national wealth?
Tran 1.356 24 [The Transcendentalist] cannot help the
reaction of this
injustice in his own mind.
YA 1.374 4 ...that which expresses itself in our will
is stronger than our
will. We are very forward to help it, but it will not be accelerated.
YA 1.376 20 The king is compelled to call in the aid of
his brothers...to
help him keep his overgrown house in order;...
SR 2.70 26 Nature suffers nothing to remain in her
kingdoms which cannot
help itself.
SR 2.78 11 Regret calamities if you can thereby help
the sufferer;...
SL 2.156 15 ...your fellow-men have learned that you
cannot help them;...
Lov1 2.172 25 ...to-day [the rude village boy] comes
running into the entry
and meets one fair child disposing her satchel; he holds her books to
help
her, and instantly it seems to him as if she removed herself from him
infinitely...
Fdsp 2.203 11 I knew a man who...spoke to the
conscience of every person
he encountered, and that with great insight and beauty. At first...all
men
agreed he was mad. But persisting--as indeed he could not help
doing...he
attained to the advantage of bringing every man of his acquaintance
into
true relations with him.
Cir 2.320 16 I can know that truth is divine and
helpful; but how it shall
help me I can have no guess...
Pt1 3.28 7 ...[these stimulants] help [a man] to escape
the custody of that
body in which he is pent up...
Mrs1 3.153 22 What is rich? Are you rich enough to help
anybody?...
NER 3.272 26 I cannot help recalling the fine anecdote
which Warton
relates of Bishop Berkeley...
NER 3.284 7 ...the good globe...carries us securely
through the celestial
spaces anxious or resigned, we need not interfere to help it on;...
UGM 4.34 26 In the moment when [any genius] ceases to
help us as a
cause, he begins to help us more as an effect.
PNR 4.81 25 The naturalist would never help us to [the
expansions of facts] by any discoveries of the extent of the
universe...
SwM 4.99 3 ...men of large calibre...help us more than
balanced mediocre
minds.
NMW 4.228 23 Napoleon...would help himself with his
hands and his head.
GoW 4.285 9 [Goethe's] affections help him...
ET4 5.64 20 As soon as this land [England]...got a
hardy people into it, they could not help becoming the sailors and
factors of the globe.
ET7 5.125 7 It is told of a good Sir John that he heard
a case stated by
counsel, and made up his mind; then the counsel for the other side
taking
their turn to speak, he found himself so unsettled and perplexed that
he
exclaimed, So help me God! I will never listen to evidence again.
ET8 5.135 8 [The Englishman] is a churl with a soft
place in his heart... who loves to help you at a pinch.
ET9 5.146 22 ...so help him God! [the Englishman] will
force his island by-laws
down the throat of great countries, like India, China, Canada,
Australia...
ET13 5.220 27 When you see on the continent the
well-dressed Englishman
come into his ambassador's chapel and put his face for silent prayer
into his
smooth-brushed hat, you cannot help feeling how much national pride
prays
with him...
ET14 5.243 5 ...[the Elizabethan age was] a period
almost short enough to
justify Ben Jonson's remark on Lord Bacon,--About his time, and within
his view, were born all the wits that could honor a nation, or help
study.
ET16 5.283 16 I chanced to see, a year ago, men at
work...in Boston, swinging a block of granite of the size of the
largest of the Stonehenge
columns, with an ordinary derrick. The men were common masons, with
paddies to help...
F 6.11 6 ...all the legislation of the world cannot
meddle or help to make a
poet or a prince of [a man].
Pow 6.59 21 ...if [the weaker party] knew all the facts
in the encyclopedia, it would not help him;...
Wth 6.117 11 ...in ordinary, as means increase,
spending increases faster, so that large incomes...are found not to
help matters;...
Wth 6.118 6 It is a general rule in that country
[England] that bigger
incomes do not help anybody.
Wth 6.121 10 I know...neither how to buy wood, nor what
to do with...the
wood-lot, when bought. Never fear; it is all settled how it shall be,
long
beforehand, in the custom of the country...and you cannot help or
hinder it.
Wsp 6.212 13 ...the official men can in no wise help
you in any question of
to-day...
Wsp 6.212 15 Only those can help in counsel or conduct
who did not make
a party pledge to defend this or that...
Wsp 6.215 10 Men talk of mere morality,--which is much
as if one should
say, Poor God, with nobody to help him.
Wsp 6.239 22 Such as you are, the gods themselves could
not help you.
Wsp 6.240 1 ...[men] suffer from politics...or from
sickness, and they
would gladly know that they were to be dismissed from the duties of
life. But the wise instinct asks, How will death help them?
Wsp 6.241 27 No good fame can help, no bad fame can
hurt [man].
CbW 6.245 7 So much fate...enters into [life], that we
doubt we can say
anything out of our own experience whereby to help each other.
Civ 7.30 17 Let us not lie and steal. No god will help.
Elo1 7.95 5 We are slenderly furnished with anecdotes
of these men [Chatham, Pericles, Luther], nor can we help ourselves by
those heavy
books in which their discourses are reported.
DL 7.110 5 Do not ask [the scholar] to help with his
savings young
drapers...
WD 7.162 8 ...what can [our politics] help or hinder
when from time to
time the primal instincts are impressed on masses of mankind...
Boks 7.205 26 To help us, perhaps a volume or two of M.
Sismondi's
Italian Republics will be as good as the entire sixteen.
Clbs 7.233 5 It does not help that you find as good or
a better man than
yourself, if he is not timed and fitted to you.
Cour 7.278 12 And when the bird or deer/ Fell by the
hunter's skill,/ The
boy was always near/ To help with right good will./
Suc 7.291 21 ...[every man] is to dare to do what he
can do best; not help
others as they would direct him, but as he knows his helpful power to
be.
Suc 7.309 18 Set down nothing that will not help
somebody;...
Suc 7.311 2 ...to help the young soul...that is not
easy...
PI 8.23 24 The senses imprison us, and we help them
with metres as
limitary...
PI 8.59 13 Another bard in like tone says,--I am
possessed of songs such as
no son of man can repeat; one of them is called the 'Helper'; it will
help
thee at thy need in sickness, grief, and all adversities.
PI 8.74 26 The only heart that can help us is one that
draws...from itself, a
counterpoise to society.
SA 8.91 26 ...in the effort to unfold our thought to a
friend we...surround it
with illustrations that help and delight us.
Comc 8.168 15 The pedantry of literature belongs to the
same category [as
that of religion and science]. In both cases there is a lie, when the
mind, seizing a classification to help it to a sincerer knowledge of
the fact, stops
in the classification;...
QO 8.189 21 Can we not help ourselves as discreetly by
the force of two in
literature?
PC 8.227 21 It is only in the sleep of the soul that we
help ourselves by so
many ingenious crutches and machineries.
PC 8.232 4 Bad kings and governors help us, if only
they are bad enough.
Insp 8.283 11 ...what is will for, if it cannot help us
in emergencies?
Grts 8.312 14 A man will say: I am born to this
position; I must take it, and
neither you nor I can help or hinder me.
Grts 8.315 22 Diderot was...unclean as the society in
which he lived; yet
was he the best-natured man in France, and would help any wretch at a
pinch.
Imtl 8.335 15 ...a century, when we have once made it
familiar and
compared it with a true antiquity, looks dwarfish and recent; and it
does not
help the matter adding numbers...
Imtl 8.335 19 A candle a mile long or a hundred miles
long does not help
the imagination;...
PerF 10.69 6 ...man in Nature is surrounded by a gang
of friendly giants
who can...help him in every kind.
Chr2 10.95 17 Not by adding...does the moral sentiment
help us;...
SovE 10.190 5 ...every wish, appetite and passion
rushes into act and... protects itself with laws. Some of them...hinder
none, help all...
Schr 10.284 17 [The scholar] will have to answer
certain questions, which... cannot be staved off. For all men, all
women...are the interrogators:...Can
you help any soul?
Plu 10.312 18 ...what noble words we owe to [Seneca]:
God divided man
into men, that they might help each other;...
LLNE 10.323 3 Of old things all are over old,/ Of good
things none are
good enough;-/ We 'll show that we can help to frame/ A world of other
stuff./ Rob Roy's Grave. Wordsworth.
MMEm 10.407 6 From the country [Mary Moody Emerson]
writes to her
sister in town, You cannot help saying that my epistle is a striking
specimen
of egotism.
Thor 10.480 18 ...I cannot help counting it a fault in
[Thoreau] that he had
no ambition.
LS 11.11 3 ...I cannot help remarking that it is not a
little singular that we
should have preserved this rite [the Lord's Supper] and insisted upon
perpetuating one symbolical act of Christ whilst we have totally
neglected
all others...
LS 11.12 7 ...the Passover was local too, and does not
concern us, and its
bread and wine...do not help us to understand the redemption which they
signified.
LS 11.22 8 In the midst of considerations as to what
Paul thought, and why
he so thought, I cannot help feeling that it is time misspent to argue
to or
from his convictions, or those of Luke and John, respecting any form.
FSLC 11.193 12 If you starve or beat the orphan, in my
presence, and I
accuse your cruelty, can I help it?
FSLC 11.207 7 What shall we do? First, abrogate this
[Fugitive Slave] law; then, proceed to confine slavery to slave states,
and help them effectually to
make an end of it.
FSLC 11.213 17 Let us not lie, not steal, nor help to
steal...
FSLN 11.232 13 ...if we are Whigs, let us be Whigs of
nature and science, and so for all the necessities. Let us know that,
over and above all the musts
of poverty and appetite, is the instinct of man to rise, and the
instinct to
love and help his brother.
AKan 11.254 3 ...Help them who cannot help again:/
Beware from right to
swerve./
JBB 11.266 16 ...[John Brown] and his brave boys
vowed-so might
Heaven help and speed 'em-/ They would save those grand old prairies
from the curse that blights the land;/...
ChiE 11.474 10 I cannot help adding...that I have read
in the journals a
statement from an English source, that Sir Frederic Bruce attributed to
Mr. Burlingame the merit of the happy reform in the relations of
foreign
governments to China.
FRep 11.531 12 Nations were made to help each other as
much as families
were;...
PLT 12.3 7 ...in listening to...Michael Faraday's
explanation of magnetic
powers, or the botanist's descriptions, one could not help admiring the
irresponsible security and happiness of the attitude of the
naturalist;...
PLT 12.19 21 So works the poor little blockhead
manikin. He must arrange
and dignify his shop or farm the best he can. At last he must be able
to tell
you it, or write it, translate it all clumsily enough into the new
sky-language
he calls thought. He cannot help it...
II 12.78 18 ...[the writer]...should write nothing that
will not help
somebody...
Mem 12.97 17 We can help ourselves to the modus of
mental processes
only by coarse material experiences.
ACri 12.288 3 The short Saxon words with which the
people help
themselves are better than Latin.
ACri 12.289 13 As a study in language, the use of this
word [Devil] is
curious, to see how words help us and must be philosophical.
MLit 12.313 27 ...in all ages, and now more, the
narrow-minded have no
interest in anything but its relation to their personality. What will
help them
to be delivered from some burden...
MLit 12.314 3 ...in all ages, and now more, the
narrow-minded have no
interest in anything but its relation to their personality. What will
help them
to be...flattered or pardoned or enriched; what will help to marry or
to
divorce them...
AgMs 12.358 18 As I drew near this brave laborer
[Edmund Hosmer] in the
midst of his own acres, I could not help feeling for him the highest
respect.
helped, v. (13)
Exp 3.75 19 It is very unhappy, but too late to be
helped, the discovery we
have made that we exist.
NER 3.260 14 One tendency appears alike in the
philosophical speculation
and in the rudest democratical movements...the wish, namely,
to...arrive at
short methods; urged, as I suppose, by an intuition...that man is more
often
injured than helped by the means he uses.
Clbs 7.231 20 [The lover of letters among the men of
wit and learning] could not find that he was helped by so much as one
thought...
OA 7.334 14 [George Whitefield's] voice and manner
helped him more
than his sermons.
Dem1 10.24 22 While the dilettanti have been prying
into the humors and
muscles of the eye, simple men will have helped themselves and the
world
by using their eyes.
Schr 10.266 22 ...the philosophers and
diffusion-societies have not much
helped us.
Schr 10.273 18 Other men are...heaving and carrying,
each that he may
peacefully execute the fine function by which they all are helped.
LLNE 10.359 10 ...the architect, acting under a
necessity to build the house
for its purpose, finds himself helped, he knows not how, into all these
merits of detail...
Thor 10.453 23 [Surveying] had the advantage for
[Thoreau] that it led him
continually into new and secluded grounds, and helped his studies of
Nature.
FSLC 11.202 16 Who has not helped to praise [Webster]?
AKan 11.256 25 [The people of Kansas] have a right to
be helped, for they
have helped themselves.
PLT 12.9 6 Here [in society]...the solidest merits must
exist only for the
entertainment of all. We are not in the smallest degree helped.
PPr 12.382 7 It is not by sitting still at a grand
distance and calling the
human race larvae, that men are to be helped...
helper, n. (1)
Pray 12.356 11 And being admonished to reflect upon
myself, I entered
into the very inward parts of my soul, by thy conduct; and I was able
to do
it, because now thou wert become my helper.
Helper, n. (1)
PI 8.59 12 Another bard in like tone says,--I am
possessed of songs such as
no son of man can repeat; one of them is called the 'Helper';...
helpers, n. (4)
Civ 7.29 4 Our astronomy is full of examples of calling
in the aid of these
magnificent helpers.
Farm 7.151 11 The first planter, the savage, without
helpers...takes poor
land.
PerF 10.69 20 ...show [a man] what mighty allies and
helpers he has.
MLit 12.309 4 In our fidelity to the higher truth we
need not disown our
debt, in our actual state of culture, in the twilights of experience,
to these
rude helpers.
helpful, adj. (7)
AmS 1.82 20 It is one of those fables which out of an
unknown antiquity
convey an unlooked-for wisdom, that the gods...divided Man into men,
that
he might be more helpful to himself;...
AmS 1.99 26 Not out of those on whom systems of
education have
exhausted their culture, comes the helpful giant...to build the new...
MR 1.228 5 ...I will not dissemble my hope that each
person whom I
address has felt his own call...to be in his place a free and helpful
man...
Cir 2.320 15 I can know that truth is divine and
helpful;...
UGM 4.13 20 Men are helpful through the intellect and
the affections.
Suc 7.291 22 ...[every man] is to dare to do what he
can do best; not help
others as they would direct him, but as he knows his helpful power to
be.
Chr2 10.108 3 ...So far the religion is now where it
should be. Persons are
discriminated...as helpful, as having public and universal regards, or
otherwise;...
helpfulness, n. (2)
Wth 6.112 11 [Each man] wants an equipment of means and
tools proper to
his talent. And to save on this point were to neutralize the special
strength
and helpfulness of each mind.
CbW 6.251 5 I once counted in a little neighborhood and
found that every
able-bodied man had say from twelve to fifteen persons dependent on him
for material aid...if he do not violently decline the duties that fall
to him, this amount of helpfulness will in one way or another be
brought home to
him.
helping, adj. (1)
SMC 11.359 22 ...the [Civil] war...disclosed in [George
Prescott]...the
helping hand...
helping, v. (4)
MR 1.240 1 ...we have now a puny, protected person,
guarded by walls and
curtains...who...is forced to spend so much time in guarding them, that
he
has quite lost sight of their original use, namely, to help him...to
the helping
of his friend...
Elo1 7.75 26 In a Senate or other business committee,
the solid result
depends on a few men with working talent. They...value men only as they
can forward the work. But a new man comes there who has no capacity for
helping them at all...
EzRy 10.386 25 One August afternoon, when I was in
[Ezra Ripley's] hayfield helping him with his man to rake up his hay, I
well remember his
pleading, almost reproachful looks at the sky, when the thunder-gust
was
coming up to spoil his hay.
PPr 12.382 7 It is not by sitting still at a grand
distance and calling the
human race larvae, that men are to be helped, nor by helping the
depraved
after their own foolish fashion...
helpless, adj. (11)
Nat 1.62 4 ...when we try to define and describe
[God]...we are as helpless
as fools and savages.
Comp 2.106 14 [Jupiter] is made as helpless as a king
of England.
Exp 3.74 10 The spirit is not helpless or needful of
mediate organs.
UGM 4.7 6 Certain men affect us as rich possibilities,
but helpless to
themselves and to their times...
Cour 7.257 8 ...man begins life helpless.
Edc1 10.158 8 ...if a boy [in the school] runs from his
bench, or a girl...to
check some injury that a little dastard is inflicting behind his desk
on some
helpless sufferer, take away the medal from the head of the class and
give it
on the instant to the brave rescuer.
SovE 10.191 12 Nature is not so helpless but it can rid
itself at last of every
crime.
MoL 10.251 2 I wish the youth to be...no helpless angel
to be slapped in the
face...
EWI 11.129 18 Whilst I have meditated in my solitary
walks on the
magnanimity of the English Bench and Senate, reaching out the benefit
of
the law to the most helpless citizen in her world-wide realm [the West
Indian slave], I have found myself oppressed by other thoughts.
FSLN 11.238 22 ...Nature is not so helpless but it can
rid itself at last of
every wrong.
ACri 12.303 21 ...whilst the world is made of youthful,
helpless children of
a day, literature resounds with the music of united vast ideas of
affirmation
and or moral truth.
helpless, n. (2)
YA 1.390 6 That is [the hero's] nobility, his oath of
knighthood, to succor
the helpless and oppressed;...
Chr2 10.118 1 The churches already indicate the new
spirit in adding to the
perennial office of teaching, beneficent activities,-as in...appointing
almoners to the helpless...
helplessness, n. (1)
Nat2 3.194 24 The uneasiness which the thought of our
helplessness in the
chain of causes occasions us, results from looking too much at one
condition of nature, namely, Motion.
Helps, Arthur, n. (2)
ET16 5.286 19 At Bishopstoke we [Emerson and Carlyle]
stopped, and
found Mr. H[elps]....
ET17 5.292 24 Every day in London gave me new
opportunities of meeting
men and women who give splendor to society. I saw...Leigh Hunt, D'
Israeli, Helps...
helps, n. (2)
SR 2.65 26 The relations of the soul to the divine
spirit are so pure that it is
profane to seek to interpose helps.
Mem 12.109 15 If we occupy ourselves long on this
wonderful faculty [memory], and see the natural helps of it in the
mind...we cannot fail to
draw thence a sublime hint that thus there must be an endless increase
in
the power of memory only through its use;...
helps, v. (22)
Chr1 3.100 7 Our houses ring with laughter and personal
and critical
gossip, but it helps little.
Chr1 3.100 13 ...the uncivil, unavailable man...to whom
all parties feel
related, both the leaders of opinion and the obscure and eccentric,--he
helps;...
Mrs1 3.139 21 That makes the good and bad of manners,
namely what
helps or hinders fellowship.
Nat2 3.188 7 Each prophet comes presently...to esteem
his hat and shoes
sacred. However this may discredit such persons with the judicious, it
helps
them with the people...
NR 3.239 20 Jesus would absorb the race; but Tom Paine
or the coarsest
blasphemer helps humanity by resisting this exuberance of power.
SwM 4.107 19 In the animal, nature makes a vertebra, or
a spine of
vertebrae, and helps herself still by a new spine...
MoS 4.185 4 Man helps himself by larger
generalizations.
ShP 4.215 1 ...every subordinate invention, by which
[Shakespeare] helps
himself to connect some irreconcilable opposites, is a poem too.
F 6.17 17 [Man] helps himself on each emergency by
copying or
duplicating his own structure...
Bhr 6.191 16 ...What man is irresistibly urged to say,
helps him and us.
Art2 7.46 17 In poetry, It is tradition more than
invention that helps the
poet to a good fable.
Farm 7.141 13 The man that works at home helps society
at large with
somewhat more of certainty than he who devotes himself to charities.
Clbs 7.227 12 The clergyman walks from house to house
all day all the
year to give people the comfort of good talk. The physician helps them
mainly in the same way...
Clbs 7.228 1 Conversation is the laboratory and
workshop of the student. The affection or sympathy helps.
PI 8.37 18 ...the poet says nothing but what helps
somebody;...
QO 8.181 24 ...what we daily observe in regard to the
bon-mots that
circulate in society,-that every talker helps a story in repeating
it...the
same growth befalls mythology...
Insp 8.296 5 The deep book...helps us best.
Grts 8.301 8 ...every aspirant, by his success in the
pursuit [of greatness], does not hinder but helps his competitors.
PLT 12.25 14 I never hear a good speech at caucus or at
cattle-show but it
helps me...
II 12.85 25 That you have done long ago helps you now.
Mem 12.101 3 ...what familiarity has been acquired with
the genius of the
language, and the writer, helps in fixing the exact meaning of the
sentence.
CL 12.149 16 ...what countless uses [of the forest]
that we know not! How
an Indian helps himself with fibre of milkweed, or withe-bush...for
strings;...
Helvellyn, Mount, England, (3)
Insp 8.287 13 Do you want...Helvellyn, or Plinlimmon,
dear to English
song, in your closet?
EurB 12.368 7 [Wordsworth] sat at the foot of Helvellyn
and on the margin
of Windermere, and took their lustrous mornings and their sublime
midnights for his theme...
EurB 12.368 15 [Wordsworth]...wrote Helvellyn and
Windermere and the
dim spirits which these haunts harbored.
hem, n. (1)
Milt1 12.255 17 The man of Lord Chesterfield is unworthy
to touch [Milton's man's] garment's hem.
hem, v. (3)
Cir 2.304 11 ...it is the inert effort of each thought,
having formed itself
into a circular wave of circumstance...to heap itself on that ridge and
to
solidify and hem in the life.
Pt1 3.39 10 [The artist] hears a voice, he sees a
beckoning. Then he is
apprised, with wonder, what herds of daemons hem him in.
MLit 12.330 23 The vicious conventions, which hem us in
like prison
walls...stand [in Wilhelm Meister] for all they are worth in the
newspaper.
Hemans, Filicia, n. (1)
MLit 12.318 25 This new love of the vast, always native
in Germany... appeared in England in...Byron, Shelley, Felicia Hemans,
and finds a most
genial climate in the American mind.
hemisphere, n. (6)
YA 1.365 18 Columbus alleged as a reason for seeking a
continent in the
West, that the harmony of nature required a great tract of land in the
western hemisphere...
ET5 5.91 3 Sir John Herschel, in completion of the work
of his father, who
had made the catalogue of the stars of the northern hemisphere,
expatriated
himself for years at the Cape of Good Hope...
HDC 11.38 21 Natives of another hemisphere, [the
settlers of Concord] beheld, with curiosity, all the pleasing features
of the American forest.
War 11.161 12 The star once risen, though only one man
in the hemisphere
has yet seen its upper limb in the horizon, will mount and mount...
Mem 12.110 19 Now we are halves, we see the past but
not the future, but
in that day [when the Great Mind enters into us] will the hemisphere
complete itself...
Milt1 12.254 5 There is something pleasing in the
affection with which we
can regard a man [Milton] who died a hundred and sixty years ago in the
other hemisphere...
hemispheres, n. (2)
ET13 5.229 3 The English (and I wish it were confined to
them, but 't is a
taint in the Anglo-Saxon blood in both hemispheres),--the English and
the
Americans cant beyond all other nations.
Trag 12.406 10 Melancholy cleaves to the English mind
in both
hemispheres as closely as to the strings of an Aeolian harp.
Content (Text): Copyright
© 2005 by Charlotte York Irey
Coding (HTML): Copyright © 2005 by Bradley P. Dean
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