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Giordano Bruno
The Heroic Enthusiasts

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1 1, 3 | forth, when it is said:~12.~If towards the shining 2 2, Pre | Heroic Enthusiasts" (page 122), Bruno makes a distinct 3 1, 3 | approached when I said:~13.~With such a fire and such 4 1, 3 | the Nola-no when he said:~14.~Woe's me! my fury forces 5 1, 3 | in reality, when he said:~15.~Although to many pains 6 1, Int | old, having been born in 1548." He always regarded Nola 7 1, Int | Towards the end of the year 1583 the King became enthralled 8 1, Int | Bruno returned to Paris in 1585, being at that time tutor 9 1, Int | towards the end of January 1593, Bruno, in chains, was conveyed 10 1, Int | 17th February in the year 1600. Rome was full of pilgrims 11 1, 3 | expressed in the following:~17.~That god who shakes the 12 1, Int | Campo dei Fiori, was the 17th February in the year 1600. 13 1, 4 | in five others following:~18.~To the woods, the mastiffs 14 1, Pre | W.~FOLKESTONE, September 1887.~ 15 1, 4 | obtain the object. He says:~19.~My solitary bird! away 16 1, 1 | on.~TANS. Then follows:~2.~In form and place like 17 1, 4 | and alive in the object:~20.~Give heed, enthusiasts, 18 1, 4 | that which follows.~TANS.:~21.~Lofty, profound, and stirring 19 1, 4 | company with the heart.~22.~Cruel sons are ye to me, 20 1, 4 | sorrowing one thus laments:~23.~Ah, dogs of Actæon, ah, 21 1, 4 | he continues when he says~24.~Destiny, when shall I that 22 1, 5 | in the following rhymes:~25.~From these twin lights 23 1, 5 | is well explained below.~26.~When as the sun towards 24 1, 5 | let the rhymes be read.~27.~Above the clouds in that 25 1, 5 | written on the tablet?~TANS.:~28.~Be it far from me to make 26 1, 5 | is written on the tablet:~29.~Unconquered victor of Pharsalia,~ 27 1, 5 | let us read the tablet~30.~Sole bird of the sun, thou 28 1, 5 | Now read the lines.~TANS.:~31.~Mild are thy rays, oh, 29 1, 5 | is written on the tablet.~32.~Oh, changeful moon, inconstant 30 1, 5 | the tablet, which says:~33.~Old oak, that spread'st 31 1, 5 | come to read the lines:~36.~Sons of the Titan Astræus 32 1, Err | myrtle" read "myrtle,"~" 37, line 16, for "setting as" 33 1, 5 | the mesh, read the stanza:~38.~One time scatters and one 34 1, 5 | other time. Read the lines:~39.~Limp snake, that writhest 35 1, 1 | the modes are infinite.~4.~Love, Fate, Love's object, 36 1, 5 | rigorous ardour of my flames.~40.~Serpent, thou fain wouldst 37 2, 1 | tablet.~MAR. I will do so.~41.~A wolf, a lion, and a dog 38 2, 1 | then the following: -- ~42.~Now who shall. say the 39 2, 1 | Neque simile, nec par mar.~43.~MAR.: ~This phœnix set 40 2, 1 | enthusiast, but read the sonnet!~44.~ 2 Splendour divine, to 41 2, 1 | expressed in the following:~45.~That which keeps my heart 42 2, 1 | let us read the sonnet.~46.~If I by gods, by heroes 43 2, 1 | Therefore says the sonnet:~48.~I would do well -- to me ' 44 2, 1 | sonnet, which says: -- ~49.~I fought with all my strength ' 45 1, 1 | in the following sonnet:~5.~Beloved, sweet, and honourable 46 2, 1 | But let us read it first.~50.~Eager to find the much 47 2, 1 | let us see the rest: -- ~52.~Oh, gentle boy, that from 48 2, 1 | let us go on and read it.~53.~Methought to leave the 49 2, 2 | MAR. It says thus: -- ~54.~She who my mind to other 50 2, 3 | broke into these words~55.~First proposition of the 51 2, 3 | sum of their proposition.~56.~First proposition of the 52 2, 3 | pray you, let me hear.~LIB.~57.~First response of the heart 53 2, 3 | eyes respond to the heart?~58.~First response of the eyes 54 2, 3 | the next proposition.~ ./. 59.~Second proposition of the 55 1, 1 | said in another sonnet:~6.~Oh, wicked child of Envy 56 2, 3 | way ask another question.~60.~Second proposition of the 57 2, 3 | to this Proposition: -- ~62.~Second response of the 58 2, 4 | of nature. He says then:~63.~The first blind man.~Ye 59 2, 4 | misfortune. He says then:~64.~The second blind man.~Alecta 60 2, 4 | dark condition. He says:~65.~The third blind man.~If 61 2, 4 | his words!~SEV. He says:~66.~The fourth blind man.~Headlong 62 2, 4 | him to proceed on his way:~67.~The fifth blind man.~Eyes 63 2, 4 | that which you shall hear:~68.~The sixth blind man.~Eyes, 64 2, 4 | be to him as cold snow.~69.~The seventh blind man.~ 65 1, 1 | demonstrates in another sonnet:~7.~Love, through whom high 66 2, 4 | expressed in this sonnet: -- ~70.~The eighth blind man.~Vile 67 2, 4 | bring you the sense thereof:~71.~The guide of the ninth 68 2, 5 | put themselves, in a row.~73.~The first played the guitar 69 2, 5 | you can remember I~LAO.~74.~Song of the Illuminati:~" 70 1, 1 | this proposition, he adds:~8.~Ah me! oppress some other, 71 2, Pre | primordial Elo-him -- the A-dam,-male and female, or, (scientifically) 72 2, 4(1)| Thee so,~  With awful brows a-glow,~With burning glance, and 73 1, 4 | thoughts and all my affections abandon me, intent upon the care 74 2, 1 | this smoky fire of words~Abases that which it would elevate.~ 75 1, Int | Jordanus Brunous von Nola; aber freilich das gediegene Gold 76 2, 3 | course unto the sea,~Nature abhors the covered ground1~Now 77 1, 5 | possunt,~Nec penetrare, et abire in corpus corpore tote.~ 78 2, 4 | on the other hand, they abominate those things which are really 79 1, 3 | in a soul vices very much abominated by me -- as, for instance, 80 2, 3(1)| il coperto terren natura aborre.~ 81 2, 2 | fifth entities and other abortive portions of fantastical 82 2, 3 | certainty the one would absorb the other, and they would 83 1, 4 | one, where one individual absorbs the whole being, but where 84 1, 3 | yet, although he cannot abstain from loving, nevertheless 85 1, 5 | simulacra, et pabula amoris~Abstergere sibi, atque alio convertere 86 1, Int | elements of the Universe.~This abstract doctrine required to be 87 1, 3 | madness, others by divine abstraction become in reality superior 88 2, 4 | mad, yet no one can really abuse him. The third, represented 89 1, 5 | the winds which are in the abysmal caverns of Æolus were converted 90 2, 3 | according as it is said: Accedit homo, ad cor altum, et exaltabitur 91 1, Int | castles and towers, was only accessible on the shore side, and offered 92 2, 5 | were surprised~By a sore accident,~To which if you attend,~ 93 1, 5 | which is seen in bodies is accidental and transitory, and is like 94 1, 1 | rules, or only slightly and accidentally so; the rules are derived 95 1, 5 | and exposed to all the accidents of Nature and of fortune, 96 2, 1 | Capitoli immobile saxum~Accolet, imperiumque pater romanus 97 1, 5 | it rather supplements or accompanies that discourse.~TANS. Say, 98 1, 5 | always and in every place accomplishes everything, for in whatever 99 1, 2 | more is hid from me.~In accordance with this, I will continue 100 1, Int | same scanty welcome was accorded to it, although in every 101 2, 1 | We cannot say that this accords with all conditions in a 102 2, 5 | pain, however sharp,~Can be accounted worthy of the cost.~That 103 1, Int | devotes many pages to the accusations brought against Giordano 104 2, Pre | whether he has occasion to acknowledge it or not. It is humiliating 105 2, 2 | Campanian horizon1 He acknowledges her, and she, more than 106 1, 3 | he will never cease from acknowledging the obligation he is under 107 1, Int | university; and having made acquaintance with several men of intellect, 108 1, 5 | potent and vigorous -- rather acquiring from others than losing 109 | across 110 2, 2 | flies. Rare, I say, are the Actæons to whom fate has granted 111 1, 5 | passively; "non hostis," actively. "Hostis," the flame, through 112 2, 3(1)| an allusion to the seven activities or changes which water goes 113 1, 2 | apprehension of pain; he enjoys the actual present without fearing 114 2, 1 | causes of potentiality and actuality, of possibility and of effect, 115 1, Int | religious persecutions, and he addressed himself to his compatriots, 116 1, 5 | which is the legend, "Cæsar adest?"~TANS. Without further 117 1, 5 | That "instans" is not an adjective from the verb "instare," 118 1, 4 | which I have woven round me, adjusting them with the symmetry of 119 1, 5 | and these, if they do not administer to the disciplined soul, 120 2, 3 | the sun may be seen and admired in the moon. And as for 121 2, 5 | Therefore deny not, but admit the triumph,~Incomparable 122 2, 4 | in which he finds himself admits, he aspires certainly higher, 123 2, 1 | Blandaque refraenat morsus admixta voluptas;~Namque in eo spes 124 2, 1 | fear;~And all wild beasts, admonished and forewarned,~Fly to the 125 2, 3(1)| Darkness adopted illumination in order to 126 2, 1 | a divine messenger says: Adorabimus ubi steterunt pedes eius.~ 127 2, 1 | supernal spirit which says: Adorate sgabellum pedum eius. And 128 1, Int | puerile gymnastics, and the adoration of so-called relics. His 129 1, 3 | it is, that I, on earth, adore~A living object, image most 130 2, 2 | with virtues high the world adorns, ./. Thou didst obtain, 131 2, 3 | it go rolling aimlessly adown.~The strength unmeasured 132 1, 3 | certain laws of the divine Adrastia, are condemned to be scourged 133 2, 4 | angry against those who adulterate it, spoil it, or corrupt 134 2, 5 | this gracious face, they advanced, and overcome by the splendour 135 1, 5 | obstacles as deep ditches, advancing they lose themselves, and 136 1, 1 | to all the~aged, nor that advantage to all the young; the one 137 2, 1 | doubtless we have to expect the advent of ignorance and distress. 138 1, 5 | revolt against the foreign adversary, who comes down from the 139 2, 1 | ourselves in darkness and in adversity we may surely prophecy light 140 1, Int | in freedom. He was then advised to doff the Dominican habit, 141 2, 1 | vos eximet sevo,~Dum domus Aeneae Capitoli immobile saxum~ 142 1, 5 | dominion of Æolus in the Æolic caverns,~but of the aforementioned 143 1, 5 | dies gliscit furor, atque ærumna gravescit.~Nee Veneris fructu 144 1, 5 | conlatis flore fruuntur,~Ætatis, dum jam præsagit gaudia 145 1, 5 | which is the legend "ab Aetna!" But here Vulcan is introduced:~ 146 1, Int | intervening space that, seen from afar, had looked so bare and 147 1, 2 | may be deprived of that affability, conversation, friendship, 148 2, 1 | gloomy become gracious and affable and that it prolong not 149 2, 4 | his guide who relates the affair, about which I do not speak, 150 1, Int | fact changed the aspect of affairs as far as Bruno was concerned; 151 1, 5(1)| Sordi affanni.~ 152 1, 5 | Now the perceptive and the affectional powers are ordered in this 153 1, 2 | things that are not, and affirms that they are no other than 154 1, 2 | mixture that is in things, can afford no pleasure without some 155 1, Int | becomes. This vast field afforded him scope for teaching his 156 1, 1 | nourished. Mountain, that affordest me a quiet dwelling-place! 157 2, 1 | do live and am to live,~Affrights me, shakes me and upholds 158 1, 5 | Æolic caverns,~but of the aforementioned two lights, which are, not 159 1, 1 | does not happen to all the~aged, nor that advantage to all 160 1, Int | alternation from segregation to aggregation, which we call death and 161 2, 2 | which renders it light and agile, while the noose renders 162 1, 5 | now and then she becomes agitated, and fluctuates amidst the 163 1, 5 | expulsion of gusty sighs agitates the air. Therefore he says: " 164 1, Pre | begun, more than two years ago, for my own pleasure, in 165 1, 1 | sweet, not sweet, but an agonized longing; while the heart -- 166 2, 1 | mournful joy in sweetest agony,~Forbid me Sense and Reason 167 1, 4 | which are most pleasant and agreeable to us. So that the heart 168 1, 1 | of elm, and of corn for agriculture; of cypress for funerals, 169 2, 2 | be artisans, mechanics, agriculturists, servants, trotters, ignoble, 170 2, 1 | he was the son-in-law of Agrippa and ancestor of Tiberius, 171 1, 3 | bind, and the lover, unless aided by the graces of the spirit, 172 1, Int | being interrogated, gave ail account in detail of his 173 2, 2 | aims, and of that which is aimed at. Hence it is that everything 174 2, 3 | conceded, Lest it go rolling aimlessly adown.~The strength unmeasured 175 1, 2 | live?~Love has me dead, alack! and such a death,~That 176 1, 5 | strength to the nerves, it alarms and puts to rout the enemy.~ 177 1, 5 | nothing to satisfy her, and albeit, fixed in the thing loved, 178 2, 4 | disadvantages, because as Alcazele and Averroes showed, it 179 1, 3 | as shepherd; Danae gold;~Alcmene as a fish: Antiope a goat;~ 180 1, Int | work from the publishers, Aldo and Grifi; but not succeeding 181 2, 4 | 64.~The second blind man.~Alecta has torn from out her dreadful 182 1, 5 | virescit, A inveterascit alendo,~Inque dies gliscit furor, 183 2, 2 | master of belles lettres at Alexandria, he set him self to oppose. 184 1, 3 | transmigrate into base and alien forms. And, on the contrary, 185 1, 3 | it yet has not power to alienate the disordered appetite. 186 1, 1 | object, and in fact becomes alienated from it, especially when 187 1, 2 | convenire potest, neque cum aliis."~TANS. Now listen to another 188 1, 5 | amoris~Abstergere sibi, atque alio convertere mentem,~Nec servare 189 2, 2 | that the omnipotent and all-producing divinity fills all things, 190 2, 1 | pity!~Prolong no more this all-unmeasured woe,~Ill-timed reward for 191 1, Int | induce him to return to his allegiance to the Church, and to be 192 2, 4 | The seventh, contained allegorically in the sentiment of the 193 1, Int | covered it with veils with allegories, with myths and mysteries, 194 2, 4 | And of these, the first, allegorized through the first blind~ 195 1, Int | of Bruno's writings "Zu allgemeiner Betrachtung und Erhebung 196 2, 1 | persons with whom one is allied. In the public shows, said 197 2, 1 | government of matter, to which it allies itself, and by appulsion 198 2, 1(1)| equinoctial point in spring, are allotted to Aries in the intellectual 199 2, 3 | so far as its own vessel allows, and one sees that the light 200 1, 2 | thing is a real entity, as alloyed gold is not real gold, manufactured 201 2, 2(1)| Does he allude to the fact that bells were 202 1, 5 | corporeal beauty which can allure such an one?~TANS. No, certes; 203 1, 4 | themselves, so that, being allured and attracted by the object, 204 1, 5 | where, by a cleverly planned allurement being caught by the amorous 205 1, Int | declares that he cannot ally himself either to the Catholic 206 | along 207 1, Int | Nor can we ascribe this aloofness to religious indifference, 208 2, 4 | holy lights~That were the alpha of my darling pain?~Ah, 209 1, Int | bringen erfordert fast mehr als menschliche Kräfte vermögen."'~ 210 2, 1 | multis! Satis enim magnum alter alteri theatrum sumus."~ 211 2, 1 | Satis enim magnum alter alteri theatrum sumus."~The mind, 212 2, 1(1)| must the period of Faith alternate with the period of Denial; 213 2, 5 | everlasting laws,~And pauses alternating,~Amongst my stars she's 214 1, Int | the animal world; and this alternation from segregation to aggregation, 215 1, Int | Giordano Bruno was impossible. "Altiora, Peto" was Bruno's motto, 216 2, 1 | whose scourges, tires; -- (altrui rigor mi lassa)~Love doth 217 2, 3 | said: Accedit homo, ad cor altum, et exaltabitur Deus. Such 218 1, 5 | amore Venus simulacris ludit amantis,~Nec satiare queunt spectando 219 2, 1 | incertis erroribus ardor amantum,~Nec constat, quid primum 220 1, 2 | on the contrary, it feels ambition, emulation, suspicion and 221 2, 1 | who says: -- ~Fortunati ambo, si quid mea carmina possunt,~ 222 1, 4 | by my efforts, I may make amends and correct my defects, 223 1, 5 | by which some are wise, amiable, and beautiful, others stupid, 224 1, 5 | splendour, goes innocently and amicably to meet its death in the 225 1, 5 | decet simulacra, et pabula amoris~Abstergere sibi, atque alio 226 2, 2 | birching of children, and in anatomizing phrases and words, have 227 1, Int | Sighs through the lagoons to Ancona, where he remained incarcerated 228 2, 5 | hands,~Of those who come anear for remedy,~Its god-like 229 2, 1 | restrainment, and the sweet angers which are the efficacious 230 1, 2 | this sentence: "Impius animam dissidentem habet: unde 231 2, 3 | limits it comes to feel annoyance and disgust. Behold, then, 232 1, 1 | last, in the great whirl of annoyances by which he was~surrounded, 233 2, 4 | great, are not apt to feel annoyed by smaller difficulties. 234 2, 4 | thing be hidden because it annoys him to be diverted from 235 2, 3 | let us come at once to the answers if there be any.~LIC. There 236 2, 1 | upon the repulsion of the~anterior parts; thus the movement 237 1, 5 | he does not resemble this antichthon between our earth and the 238 2, 1 | eternal life, which a man may anticipate in this life and enjoy in 239 1, Int | Thus we see that Bruno anticipates the doctrine, proclaimed 240 1, Int | the Inquisition passed by anticipation before his~mind in the book 241 1, 3 | gold;~Alcmene as a fish: Antiope a goat;~Cadmus and his sister 242 2, 3 | possibility of it, except through antiperistasis, which means the strength 243 2, 5 | to~ ./. go and see those antiquities, the cave and fane of that 244 2, 1 | nerves, tremors in the body, anxiety of the spirit, and that 245 2, 4 | for him to pass; for if anybody should be touched by his 246 2, 3 | of being.~LAO. Are there anymore discourses?~LIB. Yes; because 247 2, Pre | that is called Od, Ob, and Aour, active and passive, positive 248 1, 5 | the conditions of which Apelles could not find in one, but 249 1, 1 | or a Homer, but one who apes the Muse of others?~TANS. 250 2, 3 | as is commonly said, the apex of the inferior species 251 1, 6 | THE APOLOGY OF THE NOLAN~TO THE MOST 252 2, 1 | world is at present full of apostate ones, the which, as they 253 1, Int | new age; philosopher and apostle of an idea, Bruno consecrated 254 1, 5 | that in virtue of those apostrophes, which are in the eighth 255 2, 3 | immense, it never can be made apparent by speech, nor the impetus 256 2, 2 | governed by sophisms and appearances which are found in the superficies 257 1, 3 | excites more than it can appease, as that divine poet shows 258 2, 1 | certain, desires ardent and appeased, and reasonings valid and 259 2, 1 | through the door of the appetitive faculty, to the heart, that 260 1, 5 | inferior. The second is by applying himself, with full intention 261 2, 5 | the medium or with slow,~Apportioning the turning~Of this gigantic 262 1, 5 | the forehead, but the two appreciable kinds of divine beauty and 263 1, Int | his country show signs of appreciating him and of doing justice 264 1, 3 | intellectual power cannot apprehend the infinite except in speech 265 2, 1 | well proposed and well apprehended warms us. The which throng 266 1, 3 | good. To that meaning I approached when I said:~13.~With such 267 1, 5 | farther away, and now it approaches nearer and nearer. But the 268 2, 2 | understood: as also these by the approbation of the ignorant multitude,~ 269 2, 2 | they were once used and approved by some old writer, must 270 2, 1 | which it has a potential aptitude, without the fulness of 271 2, Pre | work, it may be still more aptly said of translators, especially 272 2, 1 | may be reaped~In burning Apuleia, or sunbrowned Lybia,~With 273 1, 1 | complains, blames her. As the Apulian poet says:~How is it, or 274 2, 1 | Anima mea sicut terra siue aqua tibi; and again: Os meum 275 1, 5 | Taurus, Leo, Scorpio, and Aquarius, to signify the condition, 276 1, 5 | world~With lofty summits of Arabia Felix.~Thou art the same 277 2, 1 | legend which says: "Illius aram," and then the following: -- ~ 278 1, 1 | revive my spirit. Well, whose arbours cool my brows! Change my 279 2, 3(1)| Deity is an arcane, living (or moving) FIRE, 280 1, 5 | third heaven~(Mother of the archer blind, who conquers all),~ 281 1, 5 | things a tower, of which the architect is Love, the material is 282 1, 3 | contemplation of some elaborate architectural work, goes on examining 283 1, Int | incendio è tal, ch'io m'ardo e non mi sfaccio."~EROICI 284 2, 1 | Fluctuat incertis erroribus ardor amantum,~Nec constat, quid 285 1, 5 | quærit, et humor~Non datur, ardorem in membris qui stinguere 286 2, 1 | in eo spes est, unde est ardoris origo,~Restingui quoque 287 1, 5 | which are the waters, of ardours, which are the fires, and 288 2, 1 | tempus dea nacta, nocendi,~Ardua tecta petit, stabuli et 289 2, 1 | therefore it is useless to argue and discuss, because the 290 2, 2 | material is, (as Jamblichus argues); so that when a large fat 291 1, 1 | thy father's joys,~To evil Argus-eyed, but blind as mole to good.~ 292 1, Int | the methods used by the Arians or Unitarians in expounding 293 1, Int | stars, now contemplating the arid, desolate sides of Vesuvius. 294 2, 1(1)| it will never he declared aright, for he who is not such 295 2, 4(1)| Sir Edwin Arnold's translation.)~ 296 1, 5 | kindles his fire on the aromatic altar, the other finds it 297 1, Int | that instructions for his arrest had been forwarded from 298 2, Pre | animal kingdoms before it arrives at man.~It is interesting 299 1, Int | infested those lands, until,, arriving near Civita Vecchia, he 300 2, 5 | Then answered Jove, "What arrogance is thine.~What to thy riches 301 1, 6(1)| Arsenico.~ 302 2, 1 | fruantur:~Quod petiere, premunt arte, faciuntque dolorem~Corporis, 303 2, 2 | Huntress of myself, beloved Artemis,~'Midst beauteous nymphs, 304 1, Int | himself, "Maestro delle Arti," which Bruno had obtained 305 2, Pre | with a sentence from an article in the Nineteenth Century, 306 2, Pre | English, and several able articles~in the magazines have been 307 1, 3 | instruments, but as chief artificers and experts.~CIC. Of these 308 1, Int | languages; he worked at artillery, at models of fortresses, 309 1, Int | future Italy.~He was warrior, artist, mechanic, and scholar. 310 1, 5 | Venus, ut muliebria conserat arva,~Adfigunt avide corpus, 311 1, Int | the sterile practices of asceticism, were stimulants to austere 312 2, 1 | that prophetic lament to Asclepios, saying that the darkness 313 1, Int | the Sorbonne. Nor can we ascribe this aloofness to religious 314 2, 3 | the delight of the gods is ascribed to drinking, not to having 315 2, 1 | unworthy ones, so that, asini asinos fricant. But Providence 316 2, 1 | unworthy ones, so that, asini asinos fricant. But Providence 317 2, 3(1)| manifestation is triple in its aspects, for it requires, as Aristotle 318 1, 5 | goes on with ever higher aspirations, it may be said to verge 319 2, 2 | to which so many men have aspired who longed to taste the 320 1, 3 | first are worthy, as is the ass which carries the sacraments; 321 1, 4 | opposition overcome, no error assail? Oh! if by force he may 322 2, 3 | the other insists, and one assails while the other defends. 323 1, Int | hatreds, the civil wars, the assassinations which they Instigated -- 324 2, 1(1)| He takes it by assault, without offering battle: 325 2, 1 | and at different times had assaulted him as it were in vain -- 326 1, Int | Renaissance. It may also be asserted that Nola was the only city 327 1, 3 | perfect, by transforming and assimilating ourselves to it. It is not 328 2, 1 | withhold except through assimilation or rejection by oneself1~ 329 2, 1 | seems to him best. Let him associate either with those whom he 330 1, 1 | notwithstanding its kinship, association, and signification, jealousy 331 1, Int | arrival in Italy, but being assured by Mocenigo that he could 332 1, 3 | shakes the sounding thunder,~Asteria as a furtive eagle saw;~ 333 1, Int | Bruno discovered to those astonished minds the, myriads of worlds 334 1, Int | his eloquence caused great astonishment; and the fame of Bruno reached 335 1, 5 | lines:~36.~Sons of the Titan Astræus and Aurora,~Who trouble 336 1, 1 | youth will in age not go astray. But derision is for those 337 2, 1 | sweetness, gentleness, and astuteness, in seas, on earth, in sky, 338 2, 4 | so far from ensuring the attainment of such an end, that it 339 1, Int | the young Lutherans who attended his lectures; in settling 340 2, 5 | We all were quiet, mute, attent,~Until she said, "Oh ye 341 2, 1 | art of~ ./. considering attentively things low and high, divine 342 2, 2(1)| Atteso che sempre è altro ed altro, 343 2, 1 | the depths of oblivion. Atticus does not survive because 344 1, Int | my wayfaring to be thus attired; and so I got a white cloth 345 1, Int | reason of this independent attitude, which kept him free of 346 1, Int | make myself known and to attract attention." He gave thirty 347 1, 1 | alone which has power of attracting him to itself; and this 348 2, Pre | Plumptre (Westminster Review, August, 1889), an interesting parallel 349 2, 1 | secretary and councillor of Augustus. That, I say, which made 350 1, 5 | of the Titan Astræus and Aurora,~Who trouble heaven, earth, 351 1, Int | gediegene Gold and Silber aus der Masse jener zo ungleich 352 1, Int | asceticism, were stimulants to austere study, and to the fervour 353 1, 6 | reign beauty, ladies, our austerity~Cannot depreciate, nor would 354 1, Int | ungleich begabten Erzgänge auszuscheiden und unter den Hammer zu 355 2, 1 | country; when they were in authority and tranquillity they were 356 2, Pre | If this is the case with authors who produce original work, 357 1, Int | it irksome to go through automatically the daily vulgar routine 358 1, 5 | lights are all that may avail~Peace to restore; murderous 359 2, 2(1)| considerazioni da mettere avanti lana di capra, o l'ombra 360 1, 5 | its own, which has its own avenger, which, through remorse 361 2, 1 | and lead me on,~Who would aver that more it might beseem~ 362 2, 4 | the way.~ ./. The next one avers that he has lost his sight 363 2, 4 | Whence says the Psalm: "Averte oculos tuos a me, quia ipsi 364 1, 5 | conserat arva,~Adfigunt avide corpus, iunguntque salivas~ 365 2, 4 | tuos a me, quia ipsi me avolare fecere." And so he suppresses 366 2, 1 | closed at night in sleep,~Awake remain, open, and full of 367 1, 3 | of the body; then, as if awakened and brought to themselves, 368 2, 1 | soliciting the affections and awakening thought. Bat now, the sole 369 2, 4(1)| I behold Thee so,~  With awful brows a-glow,~With burning 370 2, 1 | orbicular motion upon its own axis and about its own centre 371 2, 1 | the shore didst loose~The baby bark, and to the slender 372 1, 3 | shepherd Mercury became;~Bacchus a grape; Apollo was a crow;~ 373 2, 1 | Care kindles and the peril backward draws.~Ten me, what power 374 2, 1 | more serene,~Nor hostile baleful shadows fall away.~By thine 375 1, 5 | So be it.~ ~PRINTED BY BALLANTYNE, HANSON AND CO. LONDON AND 376 1, 1 | tears than others are by the band of kings, emperors, and 377 1, Int | more harassed by hordes of bandits and outlaws, who invested 378 1, 5 | plains, where, through the baneful presence of the enemies 379 1, 1 | who would kill those and banish these, now by the scourge 380 1, 1 | thence alone he derives that barb which, killing him, constitutes 381 1, Int | the Romans to that of the Barbarians and of the Middle Ages, 382 1, 2 | run all those who are of a barbarous nature, who neither do nor 383 1, 5 | that dried-up, thin, pale, bare-footed, and submissive condition 384 1, 1 | are certain schoolmen who barely allow Homer to be a poet, 385 2, 1 | that roars and the dog that barks (applause).~CES. What means 386 2, 3 | passage to the lofty streams;~Barring their twofold course unto 387 1, 4 | fate has drawn away the bars~With which she ever sought 388 1, Int | then calling his servant Bartolo and five or six gondoliers, 389 2, 2 | considered, that he who feeds bas a certain natural memory 390 1, Int | The philosophy of Bruno is based upon that of Pythagoras, 391 1, 2 | we become sharers of the baseness and unworthiness of the 392 1, 2 | different from the other baser ones -- not as virtue from 393 2, 3 | Like to the springs that bathe the Nereids' brows~Which 394 1, 5 | which feeds his fancy and bathes his spirit; yet, inasmuch 395 2, 4 | for the eyes are like two beacons, which guide the ship, and 396 2, 2 | the skin, and lengthen the beard, they rot, and in these 397 1, 3 | agrees with its bright and beatific object. Fitly, therefore, 398 2, 3 | included in the object and beatifically absorbed by it. Here the 399 1, 2 | of sensual felicity and beatitude, and this same is the garden 400 1, 1 | are born only to gnaw and befoul the studies and labours 401 1, Int | Masse jener zo ungleich begabten Erzgänge auszuscheiden und 402 1, Int | himself to his compatriots, begging for work from the publishers, 403 1, 1 | Jealousy, get thee hence -- begone! away!~These may suffice 404 1, 4 | of the beautiful which is begotten in the soul, we yet desire 405 1, 3 | of the affections and the behaviour of those towards inferior 406 1, 4 | because while one stands beholding the figure manifested to 407 1, Int | innovator. After five months it behoved him to leave Noli; he took 408 1, Int | a philosopher, and as a believer: here he reveals himself 409 2, 2 | when, being a master of belles lettres at Alexandria, he 410 1, 5 | scourges, which are the bellows, the coals, the forge, the 411 1, Int | the Order to which they belonged. Both went forth from their 412 1, 5 | worst diseases the patients benefit more by believing this or 413 2, 1 | itself, and by appulsion benefits and communicates of its 414 1, 5 | not only blameless, but benevolent in killing the enthusiast, 415 2, 1 | the Divine, which in its benignity communicates itself or produces 416 2, 5 | splendour of that majesty, they bent their knee to the earth, 417 2, 1 | aver that more it might beseem~If that, of Heaven so loved 418 1, 5 | pains and troubles which beset love, principally love of 419 | beside 420 2, 1 | Who had for thirty years besieged in vain.~He marked that 421 1, 2 | the amorous snare,~Lest he besmear his wings, let him beware.~ 422 1, Int | writings "Zu allgemeiner Betrachtung und Erhebung der Geistes 423 1, Int | he intended afterwards to betray, and deliver into the hands 424 1, Int | disciple who ultimately betrayed and sold him to the Holy 425 1, 2 | desire to be united to it, bewailing its absence and being afflicted 426 2, 4 | Qui sitit, veniat et bibat!"~MIN. It is not to be denied, 427 1, 5 | captat sæpe misella.~Ut bibere in somnis sitiens cum quærit, 428 2, 3 | and other of us both be bid,~How can we move the beauteous 429 2, 1 | affection of the enthusiast is bifold, divided, harassed, and 430 1, 3 | is not, a fury of black bile which sends him drifting 431 2, 5 | answered Jove, "God of the billowy sea!~That one should ere 432 2, 2 | having grown old in the birching of children, and in anatomizing 433 1, Int | and from Vesuvius, was the birth-place of Giordano Bruno. It is 434 2, 4 | not say that his mouth is bittered but that the food is bitter. 435 1, 2 | no pleasure without some bitterness; and more than this, I will 436 1, 5 | lights, which are, not only blameless, but benevolent in killing 437 1, 1 | who laments and complains, blames her. As the Apulian poet 438 2, 5 | of the lights of night,~Blanches the chariot of diurnal flames,~ 439 2, 1 | frangit Venus inter amorem,~Blandaque refraenat morsus admixta 440 2, Pre | Secret Doctrine," by H. P. Blavstsky, "There exists an universal 441 1, 5 | thirdly burns, and fourthly blazes or inflames that which it 442 1, 3 | forth from this detested bliss,~And I reclaim me from the 443 1, 4 | that mountain mount,~Which, blissful to the high gates bringing, 444 1, 4 | which she ever sought to block thy way. Go! I desire for 445 2, 4 | himself usually hampered and blocked by obstacles and opposition.~ 446 1, 2 | state, except some senseless blockhead, who is so all the more 447 1, 5 | ill-nourished, attenuated, poor in blood, and rich in melancholy 448 2, 1(1)| its higher self, can the bloom open. -- ("Light on the 449 1, 5 | head with four faces, which blow towards the four corners 450 2, 1 | the road is as sure and as blythe as Nature herself could 451 1, Int | Vecchia, he was taken on board a Genoese vessel, and carried 452 2, 5 | waves,~To make thy foolish boasting rise so high?"~"Thou hast," 453 2, 1 | Now here is a boy in a boat, which little by little 454 1, 5 | of the valley and of the boggy plains, where, through the 455 1, Int | emerged from this tutelage the boldest and least fettered of philosophers. 456 2, 1 | upon me fell that double bolt, ./. Flung as from hand 457 1, 5 | that smith who makes the bolts of Jove which torment offending 458 2, 4 | Has thus reduced me to a boneless dust,~Which now to its own 459 1, 4 | Back unto me a too unhappy boon;~Ye mangle me, and will 460 1, 1 | thing loved, of which it boots not to speak to him who 461 2, 2 | to arrive at the desired booty by means of the imprints 462 2, 1 | sinks, now mounts.~The soul borne down with anxious cares~ 463 2, 1 | with his own, and not a borrowed splendour, sends his darts, 464 2, 2 | thorns and covered with bosky, rough and umbrageous plants; 465 2, 5 | and flattering hopes,~Our bosoms has encumbered with her 466 1, 4 | which has no margin, nor any boundaries.~CIC. This progression appears 467 2, 1 | in the opaque depths and bowels of the earth -- having located 468 1, 4 | and like to proud~And able bowmen, draw at the mark,~"Which 469 1, Int | entered the cloisters as~boys: the one joined the Dominicans, 470 2, 2 | power to make him lose his brain, his life, his art; that 471 1, 5 | But what signifies that branch of palm, around which is 472 1, Int | and more before he ever breathed the stifling air of a dungeon; 473 1, 5 | also sighs, and the same breathes; and therefore the vehemence 474 2, 2 | order with propriety and brevity.~MAR. It says thus: -- ~ 475 1, Int | chains, was conveyed from the Bridge of Sighs through the lagoons 476 2, 2 | indolence, become in this brief life attached to unworthy 477 1, 4 | CIC. But, prythee, tell me briefly what you mean about the 478 1, Int | safeguard against,~the bands of brigands that infested those lands, 479 1, 5 | valleys of the north thou brightenest,~And turning by thy dust-encumbered 480 1, 5 | but principally and most brilliantly in the sun itself. Now the 481 1, Int | und unter den Hammer zu bringen erfordert fast mehr als 482 2, 5 | that temperate sky of the British Isles, and come into the 483 1, Int | place longing to find a broader field of action. and greater 484 2, 3 | itself heard by the breast, broke into these words~55.~First 485 1, 5 | flame under the head of bronze, from the holes in which, 486 1, 3 | dart,~Runs fainting to the brook,~Or unicorn, unto the chaste 487 2, 1 | how this quiver and bow of Bros display the sparks around, 488 1, 5 | sighs opprest.~Turbulent brothers of the stars,~Companions 489 2, 5 | Ocean, with the haughty brow:~"For that I am content~ 490 1, Int | die Schriften des Jordanus Brunous von Nola; aber freilich 491 2, 1 | such silence as that of the brutes who are in the likeness 492 1, 1 | Poetaster!~That in Milan didst buckle on thy wreath~Composed of 493 1, 5 | the amorous fire, and the builder is himself, who says: "Mutuo 494 2, 2 | after their founders and~builders and above them all presides 495 1, 5 | scatters and one gathers;~One builds, one breaks; one weeps, 496 1, 5 | the soul which has thus built and designed it. Now does 497 1, 3 | Cadmus and his sister a white bull;~Leda as swan, and Dolida 498 1, Int | death: the light of genius burned in them both, the fire of 499 2, 4 | the light, and that they bury him together with his own 500 2, 1 | knowledge suitable to the business, he does not know where


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