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Part, Dialogue grey = Comment text
1001 1, Int | interest of Rome to destroy. Disappointed at not finding work to do
1002 1, Int | the souls of both might be discerned the impress of the Order
1003 2, 2(1)| A discerning of the Infinite in the Finite. -- ("
1004 1, Int | wisdom; and Mocenigo, the disciple who ultimately betrayed
1005 1, 5 | do not administer to the disciplined soul, or to a clear and
1006 1, 4 | sorrowful, not from real discontent, but on account of pains
1007 1, Int | s, and he was forced to discontinue his lectures at the Sorbonne.~
1008 2, 1 | controversy are not without their discouragements, however vast those consolations
1009 1, 1 | for the fruitful harvest, discovering in himself the fervour of
1010 1, 5 | which has no stability nor discretion as to its object, and intellectual
1011 2, 1 | through the rational and discursive faculty, it comes to a purer
1012 2, 1 | is useless to argue and discuss, because the affection informs
1013 1, Int | Philosophical questions were discussed at the Sobonne with much
1014 1, Int | opportunity of introducing and discussing the deepest questions --
1015 2, 4 | inquiry and doubt, others by discussions and definitions,~ ./. others
1016 1, 5 | truth; and in the worst diseases the patients benefit more
1017 2, 1 | Seek I myself from pain to disengage,~Hope sustains me then whose
1018 2, 2 | renders it more active and disengaged.~CES. Speak on then!~MAR.
1019 1, 2 | It would then be a great dishonour to a generous soul, if,
1020 1, 4 | before were disunited and disjoined: that is Love; he who has
1021 1, 4 | comfort comforting,~Who my disjointed members joined,~And leaves
1022 1, 4 | little by little, from dislike and regret, she proceeds
1023 1, 2 | much he suffers from this dislocation and distraction in himself;
1024 1, 5 | power to jostle him c,. dislodge him from his place. And
1025 1, 4 | will and of her own desire dismissed her heart, which goes running
1026 1, 4 | by natural feebleness. He dismisses his heart then to make more
1027 2, 4 | others by means of order and disorder, others through composition
1028 1, 3 | not power to alienate the disordered appetite. In this disposition,
1029 1, 4 | contracted with matter. She dispatches the armed thoughts, which,
1030 2, 1 | Beauty imprints and honesty dispels;~Zeal holds me fast; all
1031 2, 4 | the pupils of the eyes are dispersed in water, the water into
1032 2, 1 | tranquillity they were menaced with dispersion and captivity. And as in
1033 2, 2 | genius and the spirit which displayed itself at Nola, which lies
1034 1, 2 | himself in it, or even to feel displeased with it, but rather does
1035 1, 3 | of which this last most displeases, because it takes away the
1036 1, 2 | no true lover can love be displeasing; but because he loves unhappily,
1037 1, 5 | one pleasure, there is no displeasure that has any power to jostle
1038 2, 1 | beauty to those who are well disposed, not only does not keep
1039 2, 1 | and entire possessor and disposer of the soul, for she neither
1040 1, 3 | the highest aim, and which disposes of all things according
1041 2, 4 | The fifth results from the disproportion of the means of our cognition
1042 1, 5 | or at least to a certain disregard of self, and a contempt
1043 1, 2 | within his soul the greatest dissension that is possible to be felt,
1044 1, 2 | sentence: "Impius animam dissidentem habet: unde nec secum ipse
1045 2, 1 | to many, because they are dissimilar; if it be possible, let
1046 1, 5 | demonstrates rather difference and dissimilarity; as it is commonly believed,
1047 2, 1 | nemico di molti per che son dissimili), so that he be not like
1048 1, Int | disposition to live in forced dissimulation, and he felt that he could
1049 2, 1(1)| personality of the man is dissolved and melted -- not until
1050 1, Int | equally immortal. The body dissolves, and is transformed; the
1051 1, 3 | they may be excited by a dissonance as corporeal~through seditions,
1052 1, 1 | which he sees and desires is distant and adverse to him. Every
1053 2, 3 | genus are quite separate (distantissimi), so that the meaning of
1054 1, 3 | is a very proper and nice distinction that is made between loving
1055 2, 2 | one; he sees no more by distinctions and numbers, which, according
1056 1, 5 | that it comes to be held as distinctive of the one, and the other
1057 2, 1 | by various objects, which distract it, but is one sole wound,
1058 1, Int | as many worlds which are distributed in as many distinct series
1059 1, Int | attributes, dividing and distributing them according to the method
1060 1, Int | him a few gentlemen of the district, to whom he taught the science
1061 1, 5 | their opposites, and which disturb us, as the other opposite
1062 1, Int | Neapolitan provinces were disturbed by constant earthquakes,
1063 1, 4 | members, which before were disunited and disjoined: that is Love;
1064 1, 3 | in this and then in that ditch, now against this or that
1065 1, 5 | of such obstacles as deep ditches, advancing they lose themselves,
1066 2, 4 | be on earth, or near to Ditis or to Jove,~I pray ye say,
1067 2, 5 | Blanches the chariot of diurnal flames,~As He who governs
1068 1, 4 | implication, Plato, and those who dive more profoundly into it,
1069 2, 4 | because it annoys him to be diverted from looking at that which
1070 1, 5 | himself to a divine pattern, diverting the sight from things which
1071 2, 1 | a huge animal, he cannot divide the waters without making
1072 1, Int | thirty Divine attributes, dividing and distributing them according
1073 1, 4 | but thinkable; no longer dividual, but individual; no longer
1074 1, Int | same Liguria Columbus first divined~another hemisphere outside
1075 2, 4 | through composition and division, others by separation and
1076 1, 4 | doomed to see this horrible divorce between my parts and members?
1077 2, 2 | dixerat omnibus puellis,~Non dixit tibi. Ta puella, non es.~
1078 2, 4 | Aristotle and the scholastic doctors.~MIN. Let us go, and we
1079 1, 2 | What wilt thou?~F. What doest thou?~S. I suffer.~F. Wherefore?~
1080 1, Int | He was then advised to doff the Dominican habit, which
1081 2, 1 | thou the soul for debt and dole receive~With heart, with
1082 1, 2 | Hinc metuunt cupiuntque, dolent gaudentque, nec~Respiciunt,
1083 1, 3 | bull;~Leda as swan, and Dolida as dragon;~And through the
1084 2, 1 | ulla putatis dona carcere dolis? For strength which cannot
1085 2, 1 | Dolci mie piaghe, miei dolci dolori!~X.~CES. It would seem that
1086 1, 3 | Saturn;~And in a calf and dolphin Neptune dwelt;~Ibis and
1087 1, 4 | strange, and the sense is more domesticated and at home. I am forced
1088 1, 4 | Warn with the flame of domesticity,~And with strong repression
1089 1, Int | then advised to doff the Dominican habit, which he still wore;
1090 1, Int | boys: the one joined the Dominicans, the other the Jesuits;
1091 2, 1 | memori vos eximet sevo,~Dum domus Aeneae Capitoli immobile
1092 2, 1 | Fortunae au ulla putatis dona carcere dolis? For strength
1093 2, 2 | Euclid, of Priscian, of Donato, and others, who were found
1094 1, 4 | external violence), am I doomed to see this horrible divorce
1095 1, Int | again, clothed with the doublet of the mechanic he had found
1096 2, 1 | happiness and discipline, doubtless we have to expect the advent
1097 2, 5 | Beneath the roof of heaven so dowered as she.~Now that we know
1098 1, 3 | Leda as swan, and Dolida as dragon;~And through the lofty object
1099 1, 2 | the sensual opposite which drags him down towards hell. So
1100 1, 1 | the young wise.~TANS. That drawback does not happen to all the~
1101 1, 2 | emulation, suspicion and dread. One evening, after supper,
1102 1, 3 | Liberty takes flight and dreads the ice.~Such is the heat,
1103 1, 5 | high place,~When oft with dreaming I am fired,~For comfort
1104 1, Int | nor grass refreshed the dreary space which stretched out
1105 2, 1 | intoxication of Lethe, and drenched with the waves of forgetfulness
1106 1, Int | persuaded me to wear the dress again, even though I would
1107 2, 4 | destroyed the eyes, and then dried up all the remaining moisture
1108 1, 5 | his mother, Poverty, that dried-up, thin, pale, bare-footed,
1109 1, 3 | black bile which sends him drifting outside, of judgment, reason,
1110 2, 3 | extends, and the soul, which drinks of Divine nectar and the
1111 1, 1 | and foolish, because he drives them distracted, and hurries
1112 1, 3 | sweet in plaintiveness to droop,~Why does that lofty splendour
1113 2, 1 | trouble, prison, rain, and drowning. See how fortune deludes
1114 2, 5 | The fifth with the Spanish drum sang:~Showing the soul all
1115 2, 1(1)| intellectual zodiac. -- (Drummond's "Oedipus Judaicus.")~
1116 2, 1 | through the epistles of Tully; Drusus, the ancestor of Cæsar,
1117 2, 4 | other fluid,~To set the dryer element at rest,~Has thus
1118 1, 4 | the contrary, it is even dubious whether it be intellectual
1119 2, 4 | the Nile falls down and dulls the senses~Of the joyless
1120 2, 1 | putrefaction in the stomach and is duly digested. In this state,
1121 2, 1 | jaw.~The whale, ere he the dumb Protean herd~Hungry pursues,
1122 1, Int | breathed the stifling air of a dungeon; and again:~The soul nor
1123 1, 5 | brightenest,~And turning by thy dust-encumbered steps,~Thou lightest in
1124 2, 3 | true that it causes dry and dusty impressions in the caves
1125 1, Int | conditions of men, and their duties towards each other. The
1126 1, Int | who know how to found a dynasty and to fix the destiny of
1127 2, 1 | let us read it first.~50.~Eager to find the much desired
1128 1, 2 | glowing desires; in his eagerness he is clamorous, and he
1129 2, 1 | his water forth.~Lions and eagles of the earth and sky,~And
1130 1, Int | imagination, he was from his earliest years given to meditation
1131 2, 1 | rather praise himself for his earnestness and courage, than give praise
1132 1, Int | latter place two years, earning his bread by teaching.~Prague
1133 1, Int | by means of fire, flood, earthquake, and irruptions, transform
1134 1, Int | were disturbed by constant earthquakes, and devastated by pestilence
1135 2, 4 | such an end, that it is easier to believe that the highest
1136 2, 3 | raising their wet faces to the eastern sun, is less than these
1137 2, 3 | soul.~LAO. Repeat, if you eau recollect, the reasons and
1138 2, 2 | with one voice have said: Ecce, elongavi fugiens, et mansi
1139 1, Int | philosopher predominates over and eclipses the poet. The first sacrifices
1140 1, 5 | in whatever part of the ecliptic he is to be found, he makes
1141 1, Int | turn creators, we raise the edifice of science; through the
1142 1, 5 | towards the sky to certain edifices, towers, gardens, and orchards,
1143 1, 5 | HANSON AND CO. LONDON AND EDINBURGH~
1144 1, Int | Through struggle is man educated, fortified, and raised.~
1145 1, Int | full of opposition is this educational process of the soul. As
1146 2, 4(1)| Sir Edwin Arnold's translation.)~
1147 2, 3(1)| latter, in all its seeming effulgence and glory, is merely a mass
1148 2, 1 | The brightness of her own effulgent thought;~The lofty concept
1149 1, 2 | where he treats of the Egyptian mysteries, this sentence: "
1150 2, 1 | is taken from the ancient Egyptians, who made a certain statue
1151 1, Int | und Erhebung der Geistes eigneten sich die Schriften des Jordanus
1152 1, 3 | the contemplation of some elaborate architectural work, goes
1153 2, 2 | work of their life in the elaboration of those studies which are
1154 1, 5 | inclination, by voluntary election, and by disposition of fate,
1155 2, 4 | itself because it seeks and elects its subject; but there is
1156 1, 4 | with the symmetry of the elementary conditions, if my thoughts
1157 1, 5 | conversion to that which elevates it, it becomes fortified
1158 1, 1 | and laws; of poplar, of elm, and of corn for agriculture;
1159 2, Pre | light of the primordial Elo-him -- the A-dam,-male and female,
1160 2, 2 | one voice have said: Ecce, elongavi fugiens, et mansi in solitudine.
1161 1, Int | extraordinary memory and his eloquence caused great astonishment;
1162 | elsewhere
1163 1, Int | doctrine required to be elucidated and fixed. From a hypothesis
1164 1, 5 | which is mostly put as an elucidation of the undertaking.~CIC.
1165 2, 1 | impotent,~And seek no more to elude my destiny,~Or make endeavour
1166 2, 2 | fast, they become thin and emaciated, they scourge the skin,
1167 2, 2(2)| representing the first triad that emanates from, the Universal Monad --
1168 1, Int | time reigned the great Duke Emanuele Filiberto, a man of strong
1169 2, 2 | tearing to pieces and placing embankments so that the volatile~ ./.
1170 1, Int | on with little delay, and embarked for Venice.~Berti, in his
1171 1, Int | inquiring whether he intended to embrace the religion of Calvin,
1172 2, 2 | desired, sought for, and embraced, and that which is more
1173 2, 1 | promoted to the altitude and eminence of more excellent kinds.
1174 1, 1 | kingdom,~No favouring hand of emperor,~No highest priest nor great
1175 1, 3 | of their own, as into an empty chamber, the divine spirit
1176 2, 1 | looking at the stars? At the empyreal heaven above the ether?~
1177 2, 1 | of mine~(So great that e'en with this it may compare),~
1178 1, Int | that mould that would have enabled him to hide his principles.
1179 1, 5 | various kinds of precious enamel, and there is a legend about
1180 1, 3 | more easily and intensely enamoured, and also more easily and
1181 2, 1 | the heavens had willed.~Encamped I found him in those holy
1182 1, 4 | dear sons, my winged fire enchained,~And let me, some of you
1183 2, 4 | plant,~Nor virtue hid in the enchanter's stone,~Will yield me the
1184 2, 5 | the sprinkling added an enchantment.~Waiting the finish of this
1185 1, 5 | hard point, around which~is encircled a noose with the legend: "
1186 2, 4 | coming to mischief in any encounter, while he goes so absorbed
1187 1, 5 | militant thoughts, enlivens, encourages, strengthens them, and renders
1188 2, 3 | contained,~One infinite encroaches not upon another.~Nature
1189 2, 5 | flattering hopes,~Our bosoms has encumbered with her wiles.~Wretched
1190 2, 4(1)| principle of all things. -- ("Encyclopædia Metropolitiana.")~
1191 2, 1 | elude my destiny,~Or make endeavour to escape my death:~Let
1192 2, 3 | of the end, infinite and endless. 1~LAO. You mean, then,
1193 2, 1 | themselves before him, or Eneas and his offspring before
1194 1, 4 | should not become weakened, enervated and lost; but would ever
1195 1, 4 | cannot reach, and tries to enfold that which it cannot comprehend,
1196 1, 3 | since he feels his love is engaged most worthily and most nobly,
1197 2, 1 | pleasure, vices are more easily engendered. If one aspires to the supreme
1198 1, 1 | from it, especially when it engenders disdain.~CIC. Explain now
1199 2, 1 | finds itself all at once engulphed in the abyss of incomprehensible
1200 1, 5 | This seems more like an enigma than anything else, and
1201 1, 3 | conformity, love is excited, enkindled, and confirmed. Thus the
1202 1, 3 | such a noble noose,~Beauty enkindles me, and pureness binds,~
1203 1, 4 | the present beauty, which enlighten those who watch and wait
1204 2, 2 | vulgar who have but small enlightenment. Diana, the splendour of
1205 1, 5 | declines,~Then do the rains enrich the streams,~As towards
1206 1, Int | covered with fruit-trees and enriched with vineyards, he began
1207 1, Int | they called sacred; they enshrouded thought with a double~veil,
1208 1, 5 | black night the hemisphere enshrouds.~And then he rests. But
1209 1, 5 | Behold how they carry the ensign of their affections or fortunes.
1210 2, 1 | not be servant, captive, ensnared, chained, idle, stolid and
1211 2, 4 | which means, are so far from ensuring the attainment of such an
1212 1, 3 | himself with divers figures, entering into the form of beasts;
1213 1, 4 | him back from the noble enterprise?~TAMS. The sensual and natural
1214 2, 2 | that we ought not to be entertained with low things which are
1215 1, Int | sight and captivate and enthrall the intellect. That which
1216 1, Int | year 1583 the King became enthralled by religious enthusiasm,
1217 2, 1 | thine own,~For I too, lured, enticed by Love, must feel,~The
1218 1, Int | sorcerers; Mocenigo, after enticing Bruno to Venice, insisted
1219 2, 2 | and notions, certain fifth entities and other abortive portions
1220 2, Pre | Century, September, 1889, entitled "Criticism as a trade." "
1221 2, 4 | they and. I together be entombed.~[paragraph continues] The
1222 2, 2 | the nude Diana and who, entranced with the beautiful disposition
1223 2, 2 | secret cavernous retreat, all entwined with thorns and covered
1224 2, 2 | Here you see a flaming yoke enveloped in knots round which is
1225 2, 2 | captive and a subject. Why, he envies no man (for there is none
1226 2, 2 | thou in thy captivity~Thou enviest not the liberty of man or
1227 2, 1 | Restingui quoque posse ab eodem corpore flammam.~[paragraph
1228 1, 5 | That is a maxim of the Epicureans which, being well understood,
1229 1, 1 | finish the song with an epilogue on what has been said and
1230 2, 1 | Tiberius, but through the epistles of Tully; Drusus, the ancestor
1231 1, Int | celebrated professors of that epoch were to be found in the
1232 1, Int | Italian and Pythagorean epochs, fecundated by his own conceptions
1233 1, 5 | So does my love -- that equals love of heaven -- ~Become
1234 2, 1(1)| circle, reckoning from the equinoctial point in spring, are allotted
1235 2, 2 | proper that noble spirits equipped with truth and enlightened
1236 1, 5 | the motto invalidated by equivocation, by which we are free to
1237 1, Int | unter den Hammer zu bringen erfordert fast mehr als menschliche
1238 2, 2 | fons vitae. Nix est alba, ergo cornix est fons vitae alba,
1239 1, Int | allgemeiner Betrachtung und Erhebung der Geistes eigneten sich
1240 1, 5 | abradere membris~Possunt, errantes incerti corpore toto.~Denique
1241 1, Err | ERRATA.~Page 3, line 10, for "also
1242 2, 1 | says: -- ~Fluctuat incertis erroribus ardor amantum,~Nec constat,
1243 1, 1 | laurel leaves with which~O'ershadowed are my heart, my thoughts,
1244 2, 4 | Ye now afflicted are, who erst were glad,~For ye, have
1245 2, 5 | to know; and many lands~O'ertravelled, one day were surprised~
1246 1, Int | jener zo ungleich begabten Erzgänge auszuscheiden und unter
1247 2, 2 | dixit tibi. Ta puella, non es.~Thus the "Sursum corda"
1248 1, 3 | over-boldness rarely grief escapes."~Fear not the utmost ruin
1249 2, 3(1)| impedimento in atto non puo essere se non posti in atto tali
1250 2, 1 | held;" he confirmed and established them and sanctified them
1251 2, 1 | from good to evil, from low estate to high, from high to low,
1252 1, 2 | considering evil and good, estimating the one and the other as
1253 2, 3 | Esuries satiata, satietas esuriens.~LIB. Precisely so.~LAO:
1254 2, 3 | certain way satiated.~LAO. Esuries satiata, satietas esuriens.~
1255 2, 2(1)| altro ed altro, e corre eterno per la privazione.~
1256 2, 1 | empyreal heaven above the ether?~MAR. Certainly not! but
1257 1, 5 | an one, that, being the ethereal eternity itself, and consequently
1258 2, 3 | sentences, there lies hidden, ethical and natural philosophy,
1259 1, 5(1)| Mount Etna.~
1260 2, 2 | long life of Archimedes, of Euclid, of Priscian, of Donato,
1261 2, 1 | of Heaven so loved and eulogized,~Should hold me not in its
1262 1, Int | to him; he spoke all the European languages; he worked at
1263 1, 5 | easy exit, so that it can evaporate, it goes out with less violence,
1264 1, 1 | undesirable and unfortunate events, or because it makes the
1265 1, 1 | heart,~Since he, who with an ever-growing zest,~Tormenting most, yet
1266 2, 1 | Planted the trophy there, and evermore~He holds my fleet wings
1267 | Everyone
1268 | everywhere
1269 1, Int | enemies were busy collecting evidence against him. When at last
1270 1, 3 | most sensible and only too evident passion, which forces him
1271 1, 2 | prove that which is so very evident-namely, that there is nothing pure
1272 1, 5 | calm, or curse with pride.~Evidently, here, Æolus is introduced
1273 1, 5 | for this reason it cannot evoke true nor constant love.
1274 2, 4(1)| the "individual cycle of evolution," and the nine blind men
1275 1, 5 | words of the Epicurean poet:~Ex hominis vera facie, pulchroque
1276 1, Int | that city, who preached and exacted a blind faith, absolute
1277 2, 3 | Accedit homo, ad cor altum, et exaltabitur Deus. Such blessedness of
1278 1, Int | which rules all, that which exalts our nature, is Thought.
1279 1, 3 | is turned intently to the examination of him. Here, then, is the
1280 1, 4 | ye left~Still farther to exasperate my pain;~And ever without
1281 1, 2 | that is, in so far as they exceed -- are vices, because they
1282 1, 3 | contemplated and seen the excellency of humanity itself. But
1283 1, 5 | holds my heart all these excels~In wisdom, majesty, and
1284 1, 3 | oculi mei suspicientes in excelsa." Therefore he says, "And
1285 2, 4 | oculi mei suspicientes in excelsum." So that it does not require
1286 1, 1 | distracted, and hurries them into excesses, by which the spirit, soul,
1287 2, 1 | the phœnix he sends, in exchange for the light and heat received,
1288 2, 4 | for fear of offending or exciting contempt, and he is deprived
1289 1, 1 | by a good fellow when he exclaimed:~O Friar Leek! O Poetaster!~
1290 1, 1 | beginning and one result, exclaiming But what do I say of Love?
1291 1, 1 | pedants of our days, who exclude from the number of poets
1292 2, 1 | long time kept back, and excluded, a stranger and a pilgrim,
1293 1, Int | Peripatetic~school; he was not exclusive either in philosophy or
1294 2, 3 | so. it is yet a very good excuse the one for the other; because
1295 2, 3 | the office of a diligent executer, seeing that with the speculating
1296 1, 5 | to that which it puts in execution through the moral actions
1297 1, 4 | not~To make me subject and exemplar~Of such heavy martyrdom,
1298 1, 1 | and setting as mirrors and exemplars for political and civil
1299 2, 1 | the powers of the soul, to exemplify which, that verse is taken:
1300 1, 6 | to call you feminine!~Exemption I am sure you would not
1301 1, 4 | intellect nor the sense has exercised any act whatever; but, on
1302 1, 5 | intelligences, and which exerts an immediate influence over
1303 2, 1 | itself be. fogged by the exhalations of that humour, which, through
1304 1, Int | stupidity, and rascality, and exhibiting them in their true colours,
1305 2, 3 | afflicted soul because of the exhibition of tears which distil from
1306 2, 1 | dies nunquam memori vos eximet sevo,~Dum domus Aeneae Capitoli
1307 1, 4 | they are not two contrary existences, but one, subject to two
1308 1, 4 | TANS. Pricks are those experiences that stimulate and awaken
1309 2, 1(1)| mere subject for the grave experiment and experience -- not until
1310 1, 3 | as chief artificers and experts.~CIC. Of these two which
1311 1, Int | teaching the mnemonic art, and explaining his system of philosophy
1312 1, 2 | this enthusiastic hero, who explains himself in the present part,
1313 1, Int | Arians or Unitarians in expounding their doctrines, adding
1314 1, 5 | heart.~CIC. This tablet expresses with greater truth than
1315 1, 4 | different bodies, as is expressly declared by the Pythagoreans,
1316 1, 5 | bosom, and some other by the expulsion of gusty sighs agitates
1317 1, Int | Europe; the commerce in books extended through the Levant, Germany,
1318 2, 2 | to understand to such an, extent, that he becomes of necessity
1319 2, 1 | Which slowly, slowly to extinction goes, The while she, girt
1320 2, 1 | extols and of him~who is extolled; for the one has woven a
1321 2, 1 | is the glory of him who extols and of him~who is extolled;
1322 1, 3 | but not in such as may be extracted or acquired from corporeal
1323 1, Int | doctrines of St. Thomas. His extraordinary memory and his eloquence
1324 2, 4 | sense of other men. But such extravagance is of two kinds, according
1325 1, 5 | that the divine wisdom is extremely mobile, as Solomon said,
1326 2, 1 | be null,~And let not the extremest torment fail,~Which my hard
1327 1, 3 | but as intrinsic form and extrinsic framer, as that which forms
1328 2, 1 | sheltered home.~Non dà, non fa, non ha qualunque stassi~
1329 1, 5 | Epicurean poet:~Ex hominis vera facie, pulchroque colore~Nil datur
1330 1, 3(1)| Facilmente ritorna al sesso.
1331 2, 1 | Quod petiere, premunt arte, faciuntque dolorem~Corporis, et dentes
1332 1, Int | not favour the Huguenot faction more than the Catholic league;
1333 2, 1 | general is divided into two factions; although subordinate to
1334 2, 2 | been moved through similar facts to exalted affections? Who.
1335 1, 5 | arches of my sun,~Ne'er fade from the horizon of my soul.~
1336 1, Int | cloistral and monkish education failed to enslave his: thought,
1337 1, 2 | or the other of those, it fails so entirely from being virtue,
1338 1, 3 | unmindful of the dart,~Runs fainting to the brook,~Or unicorn,
1339 1, 1 | reign of Love would so much fairer be,~As would this world
1340 2, 1 | no author more regal and faithful, and, in fine, it seems
1341 2, 4 | had seen.~MIN. Many have fallen in love through report alone.~
1342 1, 3 | shows its dignity rather in falling, or in failing worthily
1343 2, 4 | The cataract of the Nile falls down and dulls the senses~
1344 1, 4 | near, close, known, and familiar. The pig cannot desire to
1345 1, Int | devastated by pestilence and famine. The Turks fought, and ravaged
1346 2, 4 | comprehended under the name of fancies (fantasmi); or, by means
1347 2, 5 | antiquities, the cave and fane of that goddess. When they
1348 2, 4 | under the name of fancies (fantasmi); or, by means of Being,
1349 2, 2 | other abortive portions of fantastical cogitations, as principles
1350 2, 1 | country, and reaches the far-off region of its more natural
1351 1, Int | we look upon "Gli Eroici Farori" as a prophetical poem,
1352 2, 1 | is in peril of losing ten farthings; and more important is the
1353 1, 5 | difficult, which, seduced by the fascinations of splendour, goes innocently
1354 2, 4 | cruel bite,~Has fiercely fastened on my soul,~And of my senses,
1355 1, Int | Calvary, of Homer and the Fathers, of Plato and St. Ignatius;
1356 1, 5 | fiercer tangent strikes,~Fatigued and parched, he sits him
1357 2, 5 | hearts am pierced~Not for a fault by nature caused,~But through
1358 2, 1 | listen to it, and to be favoured by it, is the same as to
1359 1, 1 | king of any kingdom,~No favouring hand of emperor,~No highest
1360 1, Int | that this city was ever a favourite dwelling-place for the choice
1361 2, 4 | way who is not jealous and fearful about the thing loved.~SEV.
1362 1, 3 | dost thou carry me, thou fearless one?~Turn back. Such over-boldness
1363 1, Int | dei Fiori, was the 17th February in the year 1600. Rome was
1364 2, 4 | me, quia ipsi me avolare fecere." And so he suppresses his
1365 2, 2 | should say; Oh, fat soul, oh, fecund spirit, oh, fine nature,
1366 1, Int | and Pythagorean epochs, fecundated by his own conceptions and
1367 2, 2 | better there, where the fecundity of the material is, (as
1368 1, 3 | another in it, enchanted and feeding in a wonder of delight;
1369 1, 5 | This undertaking he has feigned as a feint; he bears it
1370 1, 5 | undertaking he has feigned as a feint; he bears it as he bears
1371 1, 5 | lofty summits of Arabia Felix.~Thou art the same thou
1372 1, Int | derided and banished by his fellow-citizens, and the fate of our philosopher
1373 2, Pre | Elo-him -- the A-dam,-male and female, or, (scientifically) Electricity
1374 1, 6 | than it must -- to call you feminine!~Exemption I am sure you
1375 2, 1 | medullas,~Virginum ignoto ferit igne pectus.~[paragraph
1376 1, 2 | the same: appositely the Ferrarese poet says~Who sets his foot
1377 1, 5 | urgent cares, kindled with fervent desires, excited by frequent
1378 1, 1 | Minister of torment! Jealousy!~Fetid harpy! Tisiphone infernal!~
1379 1, Int | tutelage the boldest and least fettered of philosophers. Everything
1380 1, 3 | any wholeness; more those fetters than any liberty. For this
1381 1, Int | by high hills crowned by feudal castles and towers, was
1382 1, Int | upon his work, writing with feverish haste, he observed nothing
1383 2, 1 | the legend "Fronti nulla fides." There is no doubt that
1384 2, 1 | to her star antagonistic fief~Through that which towards
1385 1, 5 | home,~And when the sun with fiercer tangent strikes,~Fatigued
1386 1, Int | became a friar at the age of fifteen. There, in the quiet cloister
1387 1, Int | the great Duke Emanuele Filiberto, a man of strong character --
1388 1, 3 | me -- as, for instance, filthy avarice, base greediness
1389 1, 1 | which is indicated by the finger of Love seems to him the
1390 1, 2 | one. And so in the octave finishes the war which the soul has
1391 1, Int | take place in the Campo dei Fiori, was the 17th February in
1392 2, 3 | them 1 (digeriscano). Thus, firstly, cognition moves the affection,
1393 2, Pre | Levi, and since then Mrs. Firth has given us a life of the
1394 2, 1 | three species -- beasts, fishes, and birds. Into three kinds
1395 2, 1 | digesting, so as to become fitted for~the action of the sensitive
1396 2, 2 | comes to aid, and logic, the fittest mode for the pursuit of
1397 1, 1 | order that seems to me most fitting.~CIC. Begin, then, to read.~
1398 1, 3 | with variety, movement with fixedness, the inferior with the superior.
1399 2, 1 | depends and through which she fixes her gaze toward God, as
1400 1, 1 | bring them all under one flag -- one settled end and aim.
1401 1, 5 | for certain shortcomings, flagellates the transgressing spirit
1402 1, Int | the fire of enthusiasm flamed in each alike, and on the
1403 2, 1 | quoque posse ab eodem corpore flammam.~[paragraph continues] Behold,
1404 2, 4 | Spouting aloft its grasping flashing flame,~Devouring every other
1405 2, 5 | wild beast,~With false and flattering hopes,~Our bosoms has encumbered
1406 1, 4 | the soul are more fully fledged, which Plato signifies by
1407 2, 1 | to the divine splendour flees from the society of the
1408 2, 2 | the~senses, free from the fleshly prison of matter, whence
1409 2, 1 | which follows. I see a ship floating on the waves; its ropes
1410 1, 2 | labours in the care of the flocks and herds of his thoughts,
1411 1, 5 | Denique cum membris conlatis flore fruuntur,~Ætatis, dum jam
1412 1, 5 | in copious tears that flow to the sea; he sends forth
1413 1, 1 | does languish~The sweetest flower of all my hopes.~Proud of
1414 1, 4 | source of such rivers, is flown away on high with its nymphs,
1415 1, 5 | she becomes agitated, and fluctuates amidst the waves of hope,
1416 1, 5 | medioque sitit torrenti flumine potans:~Sic in amore Venus
1417 2, 1 | fell that double bolt, ./. Flung as from hand of irate warrior~
1418 1, 5 | of that butterfly which~flutters round the flame, and almost
1419 2, 1 | facility. As happens to whoever flys up high, the more he rises
1420 2, 3 | heart to the eyes.~If to the foaming sea the rivers run,~And
1421 1, 5 | they conquer their proud foes;~So does my love -- that
1422 2, 4(1)| gestation, during which time the fœtus goes through various stages
1423 2, 1 | without feeling itself be. fogged by the exhalations of that
1424 2, 4 | more or less turbid, or air foggy and cloudy, who~would believe
1425 1, 1 | And thus the soul, when foiled her high designs,~Would
1426 1, Pre | more appropriate.~L. W.~FOLKESTONE, September 1887.~
1427 2, 1(1)| is the state of a man who followeth the true Light to the utmost
1428 2, 4 | impression~ ./. of His own footstep, upon which nothing else
1429 2, 2 | hardly to distinguish the footsteps. Theologians there are,
1430 2, 1 | mournful joy in sweetest agony,~Forbid me Sense and Reason to believe.~
1431 2, 5 | should succeed,~Or pain forerunner be of pain,~But turning
1432 1, 5 | believed, that if the butterfly foresaw its destruction, it would
1433 1, 4 | track of savage beasts in forests wild.~And here, between
1434 2, 1 | wild beasts, admonished and forewarned,~Fly to the caves and cheat
1435 1, 2 | success than there is risk of forfeiting that favour, which appears
1436 1, 3 | is spiritual, through the forfeiture of harmony between the perceptive
1437 1, Int | doctrines to the world, and forget the pleasures of friendship
1438 2, 4 | therefore they are not formally gods, but denominatively
1439 2, 3(1)| produce form; Water being the formative power which Fire, itself
1440 2, 2 | dialectics and modes of forming the reason (judgment?) which
1441 2, 3(1)| power which Fire, itself formless and the moving power, animates? -- (
1442 1, Int | translator on account of its formlessness. Goethe says of Bruno's
1443 1, 3 | he torments himself, not forsooth because he loves, since
1444 1, Int | artillery, at models of fortresses, and at the smith's craft;
1445 2, 1 | committed himself indeed to fortuitous things, and has brought
1446 2, 1 | and ruin of the possessor. Fortunae au ulla putatis dona carcere
1447 2, 1 | that poet who says: -- ~Fortunati ambo, si quid mea carmina
1448 1, Int | dead, and also mother. I am forty-four years old, having been born
1449 1, Int | than one year had claimed forty-two thousand victims; but Bruno
1450 1, Int | for his arrest had been forwarded from Naples; he tarried
1451 1, 2 | generous soul, if, of a foul, vile, loose, and ignoble
1452 1, Int | foreign tyranny, he laid the foundations of the future Italy.~He
1453 2, 2 | which are called after their founders and~builders and above them
1454 1, 5 | kindles, thirdly burns, and fourthly blazes or inflames that
1455 1, Int | payment for having degraded Fra Giordano the heretic.~"L'
1456 2, 1(1)| it is hold by the divine fragment which has created it, as
1457 1, 1 | rules serve principally as a frame for the Homeric poetry,
1458 1, 3 | intrinsic form and extrinsic framer, as that which forms the
1459 1, Int | Giovanni, and my mother was Francesca Savolini; and my father
1460 2, 1 | surgant.~Sed leviter poenas frangit Venus inter amorem,~Blandaque
1461 1, Int | relics. His character was frank and open, and he was unable
1462 1, Int | societies of philosophers, of free-thinkers, and politicians, who repudiated
1463 1, Int | Jordanus Brunous von Nola; aber freilich das gediegene Gold and Silber
1464 1, 1 | aim,~Wounds, lays bare and frets the inmost heart.~Attend
1465 2, 1 | every other wish,~Cease, fretting thoughts, and give me peace;~
1466 1, Int | part or Venice called the Frezzeria, and was soon busy preparing
1467 2, 1 | ones, so that, asini asinos fricant. But Providence wills that
1468 2, 1 | the waves threaten, with frightful, fatal impetus. Ignoranti
1469 1, 1 | to put themselves in the front, by hook or by crook, through
1470 2, 1 | Nec habet latum data plaga frontem;~Sed vorat tectas penitas
1471 2, 1 | oars; around it the legend "Fronti nulla fides." There is no
1472 2, 4 | that nature upon me~Has frowned more harshly than on you?~
1473 2, 1 | primum oculis, manibusque fruantur:~Quod petiere, premunt arte,
1474 1, 5 | ærumna gravescit.~Nee Veneris fructu caret is, qui vitat amorem,~
1475 1, 5 | corpus præter simulacra fruendum~Tenuia, quæ vento spes captat
1476 1, Int | sterile, all covered with fruit-trees and enriched with vineyards,
1477 1, 5 | laticum simulacra petit, frustraque laborat,~In medioque sitit
1478 1, 5 | cum membris conlatis flore fruuntur,~Ætatis, dum jam præsagit
1479 2, 2 | that the volatile~ ./. and fugacious species should be as it
1480 2, 2 | have said: Ecce, elongavi fugiens, et mansi in solitudine.
1481 1, 5 | life, said opportunely:~Sed fugitare decet simulacra, et pabula
1482 1, Int | men as Sir Philip Sydney, Fulke Greville, and, perchance,
1483 2, 4 | to their habits and early fundamental discipline, proceed by means
1484 1, Int | early morning towards the funeral pile. Brightly shone the
1485 1, 1 | agriculture; of cypress for funerals, and innumerable others
1486 1, 3 | condemned to be scourged by the Furies, in order that they may
1487 2, 2(2)| Universal Monad -- that can furnish this needed consciousness
1488 2, 1 | furor in medullas,~Igne furtivo populante venas,~Nec habet
1489 2, 1 | poetic description of the fury-hunter.~At saeva e speculis tempus
1490 1, Int | virtue of harmony and the fusion of the opposites the intellect
1491 1, 5 | time to sadness, one to gaiety inclines;~One labours and
1492 1, 1 | true images of the absent;~Gains strength: and drawing with
1493 1, 2 | beatitude, and this same is the garden of paradise of the animals;
1494 1, 5 | certain edifices, towers, gardens, and orchards, which are
1495 1, 1 | it is possible to adapt garlands, not only of every species
1496 1, Int | and conducted him to a garret, and locked him in. There
1497 2, Pre | of the fifty portals or gateways, that lead to the concealed
1498 1, 5 | One time scatters and one gathers;~One builds, one breaks;
1499 1, 2 | metuunt cupiuntque, dolent gaudentque, nec~Respiciunt, clausæ
1500 1, 5 | Ætatis, dum jam præsagit gaudia corpus,~Atque in eo est
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