Part, Dialogue
1 1, Int| early years of Bruno's life were times of agitation
2 1, Int| for Venice.~Berti, in his Life of Bruno, remarks that when
3 1, Int| misfortune and persecution in life, and destined to immortal
4 1, Int| idea, Bruno consecrated his life to the development of it
5 1, Int| shake her; to recall her to life with the vigour of thought,
6 1, Int| published in Paris. Levi, in his Life of Bruno, passes in review
7 1, Int| Following the order of Levi's Life of Bruno, we next find the
8 1, Int| one world to another. The life of man is more than an experience
9 1, Int| which we call death and life, is no other than mutation
10 1, Int| the mind is in God. The life of the soul is the true
11 1, Int| of the soul is the true life of the man. Of all his various
12 1, Int| this perpetually wandering life, and after several letters
13 1, Int| account in detail of his life, of his wanderings, of his
14 1, Int| chance,~In living death, dead life I live?"~he writes eight
15 1, 1 | and hells~You change to life, to laurels, and eternal
16 1, 1 | brows! Change my death into life, my cypress to laurels,
17 1, 1 | noble face.~He takes my life, she gives me death,~She
18 1, 1 | remains; to deprive me of life, to burn me, to give me
19 1, 2 | chance,~In living death, dead life I live?~Love has me dead,
20 1, 2 | a death,~That death and life together I must lose.~Devoid
21 1, 2 | In a living death a dead life I live." He is not dead,
22 1, 2 | to thoughts; deprived of life, because he does not grow
23 1, 2 | Wherefore?~S. Because neither life has me for his own, nor
24 1, 2 | contemplative or speculative life, one to active morality,
25 1, 3 | gives no thought to this life. It is not, a fury of black
26 1, 3 | through which, in this earthly life, shut in this prison of
27 1, 3 | it, is in God who is its life, similarly through the intellectual
28 1, 3 | sayest truly. Now in this life, that food is such that
29 1, 3 | dead to earth;~But what life is there can compare with
30 1, 4 | practice, as of one of short life and of wavering enthusiasm.
31 1, 4 | and he leads an unusual life. Here his great dogs "give
32 1, 4 | death," and thus ends his life according to the mad, sensual,
33 1, 4 | intellectually; he lives the life of the gods, fed on ambrosia
34 1, 4 | For mine condemns me to a life apart,~Bound by unmerciful
35 1, 4 | now that I am deprived of life? To what use do I possess
36 1, 4 | attend to its own comfort and life, and not to that~of others.
37 1, 4 | natural laws of the true life, and which is in your own
38 1, 4 | that I live not. Leave me, life, that I may mount up to
39 1, 4 | that road, more than that life which keeps him in the present
40 1, 4 | difference between the one life and the other, then, vanquished
41 1, 4 | matter, and. says: "Leave me life (corporeal), and do not
42 1, 4 | worlds, serving its own life eternally; because the act
43 1, 5 | no happiness so great, no life so blessed, as in such a
44 1, 5 | pleasure is, no liberty, no life,~No smile, no rapture, no
45 1, 5 | consider it an evil to lose its life through being absorbed into
46 1, 5 | conceded to the spirit, and life which may be discovered
47 1, 5 | is the term of thy long life~Short span is mine,~And
48 1, 5 | presence, changes~death into life, and that other, by the
49 1, 5 | presence of love, transmutes life into death. The one kindles
50 1, 5 | certain conditions of a long life; but the other, through
51 1, 5 | mutable conditions of a short life. The one kindles with certainty,
52 1, 5 | divine light, is, in this life, more felt as a painful
53 1, 5 | who read the course of his life and the conditions of his
54 1, 5 | the happiest day of our life, we have ordained this with
55 1, 5 | who led a most tranquil life, said opportunely:~Sed fugitare
56 2, Pre| trials and sufferings of this life, are the cords which draw
57 2, Pre| unique, of all forms and of life, that is called Od, Ob,
58 2, Pre| scientifically) Electricity and Life. Its universal value is
59 2, Pre| Mrs. Firth has given us a life of the Nolan, written in
60 2, 1 | being soul of souls, life of lives, essence of essences:
61 2, 1 | quality and meaning of that life which proceeds from science
62 2, 1 | stays~From birth, through life, to death in sheltered home.~
63 2, 1 | with those same give him life.~CES. Does he mean that
64 2, 1 | osculi, which same is eternal life, which a man may anticipate
65 2, 1 | man may anticipate in this life and enjoy in eternity?~MAR.
66 2, 1 | thither, whence desires have life and grow~Must they aspire
67 2, 1 | those wounds of eternal life of which the Psalmist speaks
68 2, 1 | is, he, who has no more life nor sense about other things,
69 2, 1 | my death:~Let every other life to me be null,~And let not
70 2, 2 | hold within their bosom life and death,~Who most with
71 2, 2 | indolence, become in this brief life attached to unworthy things.~
72 2, 2 | him lose his brain, his life, his art; that he, meanwhile,
73 2, 2 | intention of saving his life, lost it while he was inquiring,
74 2, 2 | than as it is. The long life of Archimedes, of Euclid,
75 2, 2 | existing, and spend their life in considering how to turn
76 2, 2 | and find the work of their life in the elaboration of those
77 2, 2 | the body, and hates this life. Therefore Truth is an incorporeal
78 2, 2 | longed to taste the Divine life while upon earth, and who
79 2, 3 | sun.~I am the source of life, yet am I not alive.~I know
80 2, 3 | the fountain of eternal life in so far as its own vessel
81 2, 3 | affection begins in this life, and in, this state it has
82 2, 3 | the soul, the which is its life and its perfection; and
83 2, 3 | said to be the beginning of life, and not to be alive, it
84 2, 4 | majesty, he would lose his life and in consequence his senses.
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