| Herbert Courthope Bowen - Creative ability in children - 1892 - 232 pages
...the corn grow ? Who taught the bird to build its nest ? 1 Wordsworth's view is very like this : — We live by admiration, hope, and love; And even as these are well and wisely fused, The dignity of being we ascend. Who causes the wind to blow ? But besides these he gives us... | |
| Herbert Courthope Bowen - Education - 1892 - 236 pages
...the corn grow ? Who taught the bird to build its nest ? 1 Wordsworth's view is very like this : — We live by admiration, hope, and love; And even as these are well and wisely fused, The dignity of being we ascend. Who causes the wind to blow ? But besides these he gives us... | |
| Music - 1893 - 724 pages
...injustice practiced upon her by the fates whose one work should have been to make her happy. CHAPTER VI. " We live by admiration, hope and love, And even as...well and wisely fixed, In dignity of being we ascend. But what is error? Answer he who can ! The skeptic somewhat haughtily exclaimed: Love, hope and admiration—... | |
| Susan Elizabeth Blow - Kindergarten - 1894 - 304 pages
...the generic ideal, instead of being shut up in the prison walls of his own atomic individuality ? " We live by admiration, hope, and love, And even as...well and wisely fixed In dignity of being we ascend." result the child blindly seeks. He is striving to interpret the world by creating its image. For obvious... | |
| Alexander Whyte - Bible - 1896 - 332 pages
...near him, nothing could be a sounder sign or a surer promise of his own future character than that. We live by admiration, hope, and love ; And even as...and wisely fixed, In dignity of being we ascend. The mother of Gershom and Eliezer, from the very little that we see of her, would seem to have been a froward,... | |
| Phillips Brooks - Devotional exercises - 1896 - 394 pages
...straight way is that of the Cross. // is so. Christ hath taught this in His Word. THOMAS A KEMIMS. We live by admiration, hope and love: And even as...well and wisely fixed, In dignity of being we ascend. WORDSWORTH. \I7HAT does it mean when men as they grow older become narrow, sordid, and machine-like,... | |
| Mottoes - 1896 - 1224 pages
...close, Is scattered on the ground — to die. v. RH WILDE — Summer Rose. Lament of the Captive. St. 1. We live by Admiration, Hope, and Love ; And, even...well and wisely fixed, In dignity of being we ascend. w. WORDSWORTH — The Excursion. Bk.IV. And cradles rock us nearer to the tomb : Our birth is nothing... | |
| Phillips Brooks - Devotional exercises - 1896 - 394 pages
...straight way is that of the Cross. // is so. Christ hath taught this in His Word. THOMAS A K.EMPIS. We live by admiration, hope and love: And even as...well and wisely fixed, In dignity of being we ascend. WORDSWORTH. \17HAT does it mean when men as they ' * grow older become narrow, sordid, and machine-like,... | |
| William Wordsworth - 1896 - 426 pages
...offering to the Cephisus." See Note D in the Appendix to this volume, p. 396. — ED. • "_ffiejjyji by Admiration, Hope, and Love ; And, even as these...well and wisely fixed, In dignity of being we ascend. 765 But what is error ? " — " Answer he who can ! " The Sceptic somewhat haughtily exclaimed : "... | |
| Stanley De Brath - Education - 1896 - 232 pages
...long run, of indifference to truth. 3. " We live," says Wordsworth, alluding to our moral growth, " by admiration, hope, and love, and even as these are...and wisely fixed, in dignity of being we ascend." In other words, we live by the ideals which we form from those persons and writings with which we are... | |
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