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1501 1, Int | Nola; aber freilich das gediegene Gold and Silber aus der
1502 1, Int | Betrachtung und Erhebung der Geistes eigneten sich die Schriften
1503 2, 2 | crowd our memories with genealogies: this one is intent upon
1504 1, 4 | they are not occult as to generals; as in the entire visual
1505 2, 1 | in all that time not many geniuses will keep their heads raised.~
1506 1, Int | he was taken on board a Genoese vessel, and carried to the
1507 1, Int | enemies; but the city of Genova was devastated by pestilence
1508 1, Int | gathered round him a few gentlemen of the district, to whom
1509 2, 1 | show with what sweetness, gentleness, and astuteness, in seas,
1510 1, 4 | So that the heart that gently suffers, patiently burns
1511 1, 4 | thoughts:~A rebel he, like gerfalcon insane,~He feels no more
1512 2, 1 | rabies, unde illa haec germina surgant.~Sed leviter poenas
1513 2, 4(1)| between the nine months of gestation, during which time the fœtus
1514 1, 3 | deformed spirit, which in some gesture and expressed intention
1515 1, 5 | signification. And for the sake of getting out of the mesh, read the
1516 1, 5 | stay;~Here, where a prouder giant moves,~Who burns and rages
1517 1, 4 | despise?~Heaven the second gift denies,~To him who does
1518 2, 5 | Apportioning the turning~Of this gigantic mass,~The hidden is unveiled
1519 1, Int | that lacerated Italy, and gilded the chains which bound her;
1520 1, 5(1)| Quando il sen d'oriente il giorno sgombra.~
1521 1, Int | sciences. My father's name was Giovanni, and my mother was Francesca
1522 2, 5 | Interlocutors:~LAODOMIA. GIULIA.~LAO. Some other time, oh
1523 2, 5 | where the happy Thames~Goes gliding gaily on,~Which has of graceful
1524 1, 5 | inveterascit alendo,~Inque dies gliscit furor, atque ærumna gravescit.~
1525 2, 1 | material beauty, which is a glittering ray of spiritual form and
1526 1, 2 | grace of the~spirit, which glitters and shines in the beauty
1527 2, 1 | being capricious~ ./. and gloomy become gracious and affable
1528 1, 5 | intelligible orders and the glories of the amorous affections
1529 1, 3 | enjoying powers; but ~t is a glow kindled by the intellectual
1530 2, 1 | liberty in confinement, the glue which smears his wings,
1531 1, 5 | next shield, where stands a gnarled and rugged oak, against
1532 1, 1 | well, but are born only to gnaw and befoul the studies and
1533 1, 5 | and he being thus torn and goaded, will attain only that amount
1534 1, 3 | Alcmene as a fish: Antiope a goat;~Cadmus and his sister a
1535 2, 1 | clearer revelation of the Godlike? -- ("Sartor Resartus.")~
1536 1, Int | went over the lagoon in a gondola, in the company of~his Jailers,
1537 1, Int | Bartolo and five or six gondoliers, who waited without, they
1538 1, 4 | peril of death. How have you gotten this melancholy and perverse
1539 2, 2 | which is influenced and governed by sophisms and appearances
1540 1, 4 | circulating through the grades of perfection to~arrive
1541 1, Int | was the only city of Magna Græcia which, in spite of the persecutions
1542 1, 1 | makes the things loved, grand-at least in appearance. He
1543 1, 1 | esteems himself not less grandly crowned by his heart, his
1544 2, 1 | he should behold, should grant, and should attend~My thoughts,
1545 2, 1 | difficulty with which He grants so much even as to show
1546 1, 3 | Mercury became;~Bacchus a grape; Apollo was a crow;~And
1547 1, Int | appeared as if neither tree nor grass refreshed the dreary space
1548 2, 5 | graceful nymphs, that on the grassy banks~Of gentle Thames do
1549 1, 3 | spirit, such as purity, gratitude, courtesy, circumspection,
1550 2, 1(1)| as a mere subject for the grave experiment and experience --
1551 1, 5 | gliscit furor, atque ærumna gravescit.~Nee Veneris fructu caret
1552 2, 1 | the less he is affected by gravitation; he may even rise so high
1553 1, 2 | although they love the body and greatly desire to be united to it,
1554 2, 2 | intact and pure from ordinary greed, where the speech of the
1555 1, 3 | instance, filthy avarice, base greediness for money, ingratitude for
1556 1, 5 | stream freely to the sea.The greedy air receives from out my
1557 2, 1 | Ulysses, and all the other Greek and Trojan chiefs? Who would
1558 1, Int | founded by the Chalcidian Greeks, at a short distance from
1559 1, Int | part of the pontificate of Gregory XIV. that Bruno received
1560 1, Int | Sir Philip Sydney, Fulke Greville, and, perchance, also of
1561 2, 3 | certain that the heart, grieved and stung, causes tears
1562 1, 1 | burning best.~Fate vexes and grieves by undesirable and unfortunate
1563 1, Int | the publishers, Aldo and Grifi; but not succeeding in gaining
1564 1, 5 | the workshop of the sordid grimy consort of Venus.~CIC. Enough
1565 2, 3 | weeps with indescribable, groans, because having all it loves
1566 1, 3 | come out from the Platonic groove on account of the stupid
1567 1, Int | in this comedy he sets in groups the principal types of hypocrisy,
1568 1, 5 | the greater comprehension grows the greater desire. And
1569 1, 5 | unlocks;~Nor whatso'er the gruesome winter sends,~Can tear thee
1570 1, 2 | this there cannot be more guarantee of success than there is
1571 1, 4 | And with strong repression guard thy sight,~That strangers
1572 2, 1 | often says: -- ~Dolci ire, guerra dolce, dolci dardi,~Dolci
1573 1, 4 | and he commits him to the guidance of that god, who, by the
1574 1, Int | revolutions humanity has one guiding star, a beacon which shows
1575 2, 3(1)| Spiritual Torrents," Lady Guion.)~
1576 2, 5 | 73.~The first played the guitar and sang the following:~
1577 2, 3 | streams into the sea's dark gulf,~How does the kingdom of
1578 2, 3 | That one might say, the gum of it exceeds~That of the
1579 2, 3 | oh my heart, do waters gush from thee~Like to the springs
1580 1, 5 | other by the expulsion of gusty sighs agitates the air.
1581 1, Int | of the monks, the puerile gymnastics, and the adoration of so-called
1582 2, Pre | The Secret Doctrine," by H. P. Blavstsky, "There exists
1583 2, 1 | home.~Non dà, non fa, non ha qualunque stassi~Do l'orto,
1584 2, 1 | imperiumque pater romanus habebit.~MAR. I remember what Seneca
1585 1, Int | throwing aside the monk's habiliments by the way. He wandered
1586 1, Int | when I left Rome." Thus habited he wandered for several
1587 2, 4 | begs for free passage to Hades, because darkness alone
1588 2, 1 | being praised, saluted, hailed, and presented. Just as
1589 2, 4 | torn from out her dreadful hair,~The infernal worm that
1590 2, 4 | he finds himself usually hampered and blocked by obstacles
1591 1, Int | consumed, a monk took a handful of the ashes and scattered
1592 2, 1 | knot of the string, which hangs, down with the legend, which
1593 1, 5 | PRINTED BY BALLANTYNE, HANSON AND CO. LONDON AND EDINBURGH~
1594 2, 2(1)| to external things, and happier, the more it proceeds to
1595 1, 5 | and at the same time, the happiest day of our life, we have
1596 1, 1 | one,~Bird of sorrow and harbinger of ill,~The heart thou visitest
1597 1, 1 | anchor or support, and his harbour, to which he retires in
1598 1, Int | because from it is derived the harmonic law which draws men together
1599 2, 5 | The seventh with the Irish harp:~As day and night succeed
1600 1, 1 | torment! Jealousy!~Fetid harpy! Tisiphone infernal!~Who
1601 2, 5 | pleased you then, so proud and harsh,~To treat these wretched
1602 2, 4 | upon me~Has frowned more harshly than on you?~Conduct me
1603 1, 1 | waiting for the fruitful harvest, discovering in himself
1604 1, Int | his companions, and these hastened to refer them to the superiors;
1605 1, Int | presented him with a sword and a hat; they also~procured some
1606 1, Int | presented at that time -- the hatreds, the civil wars, the assassinations
1607 2, 4 | 66.~The fourth blind man.~Headlong from on high to the abyss,~
1608 1, 4 | bound,~Where shall he that heals, that cools, and loosens
1609 1, 5 | have ordained this with a healthy, tranquil mind at rest;
1610 1, 5 | tooth.~Fortune invoke, she hears thee not, the jade!~Nor
1611 2, 1(2)| and perfect knowledge by hearsay, or by reading and study,
1612 2, 5 | burning zone, In which the heavenly host~Of stars and planets
1613 2, 4 | is mine~Which calls for heavier lamentation.~Who will deny
1614 1, 5 | the reason why that wise Hebrew said that he who increases
1615 2, 1 | for condemnation. So the Hebrews, when they were slaves in
1616 2, 2 | net and held behind the hedges of definitions, and he considered
1617 1, 4 | in the object:~20.~Give heed, enthusiasts, unto the heart!~
1618 1, 1 | vain the call is heard,~Heedless and unprepared, they mind
1619 1, 1 | the, soul with the small helm of reason to govern and
1620 2, 5 | to us,~And with thy magic herbs,~Heal up the wound imprinted
1621 1, Int | hemisphere outside the Pillars of Hercules, so Bruno discovered to
1622 1, 2 | the care of the flocks and herds of his thoughts, which he
1623 | Herein
1624 1, Int | Waldensian and Huguenot heresies, and had invited the Jesuits
1625 1, Int | Father: this, with other heretical propositions, being brought
1626 2, 1 | distress. As in the case of Hermes Trismegistus, who, seeing
1627 2, 1 | some infamously, others heroically operate, that one learns
1628 1, Int | enterprises and the saintly heroism of Olympus and of Calvary,
1629 2, 4 | Ah, pity me, and do not hesitate~To help my speedy going.
1630 2, 4 | the solar light, without hesitation, and makes itself present
1631 2, 1 | rest,~Thou dost torment, by hiding from my view~Those lovely
1632 1, 5 | but canst not~Try for thy hiding-place, it is no more;~Recall thy
1633 1, 5 | aspiration is noted by the hieroglyph of strong breathing.~CIC.
1634 2, 2 | mortal eyes, she does more highly adorn the world,~ ./. and
1635 2, 1 | possible, surmount this steep hill. Here there is no need for
1636 1, Int | little bay surrounded by high hills crowned by feudal castles
1637 1, 2 | Pythagorean poet when he says:~Hinc metuunt cupiuntque, dolent
1638 1, 5 | does not feel,~Nor is she hindered by those snares With which,
1639 2, 4 | affections are very powerful in hindering the comprehension of the
1640 2, 1 | from my enemies.~Weary and hoarse I yield me, impotent,~And
1641 1, 2 | or discontented, without holding the proposition of our own
1642 1, 5 | head of bronze, from the holes in which, issue in great
1643 2, 1 | sluggish smoke from the holocaust of~his melted substance.
1644 2, 1 | illustrious poets should do him homage, and place him in the number
1645 2, 5 | a manner that, blind and homeless, with great labour having
1646 1, 5 | of the Epicurean poet:~Ex hominis vera facie, pulchroque colore~
1647 2, 3 | according as it is said: Accedit homo, ad cor altum, et exaltabitur
1648 2, 1 | produced absolutely from a homœogeneous (pacifico) principle, but
1649 2, 2(2)| our plane, unless its too homogeneous, perfect, because Divine,
1650 2, Pre | pointed out to him by an honest censor." If this is the
1651 2, 1 | concealed,~Beauty imprints and honesty dispels;~Zeal holds me fast;
1652 2, 1 | external beauty yet he may honourably and worthily be so attached;
1653 2, 1 | other things which thou honourest, by which thou art honoured,
1654 1, Int | cloth robe, and I put on the hood which I had preserved when
1655 1, 1 | themselves in the front, by hook or by crook, through the
1656 1, 5 | written: "Ad vitam; non ad horam."~TANS. Persistence in such
1657 1, Int | were still more harassed by hordes of bandits and outlaws,
1658 1, 5 | moon, inconstant moon!~With horns now full, now void, thou
1659 1, 4 | am I doomed to see this horrible divorce between my parts
1660 1, 3 | conquers and overcomes the horrid monsters, and however much
1661 2, 5 | zone, In which the heavenly host~Of stars and planets stand
1662 2, 3 | soul and content with such hostility and rebellion, although
1663 1, 2 | coldest and hottest and the hotter and colder, in the middle
1664 1, 2 | between the coldest and hottest and the hotter and colder,
1665 1, 5 | tears.~My floods and flames howe'er intense they be,~Are
1666 2, 1 | therefore behold the wolf that howls, the lion that roars and
1667 2, 1 | manifest that, being such a huge animal, he cannot divide
1668 2, 2 | can easily demolish the humanities and ratiocination of Aristotle,
1669 1, 4 | divinely and not as animals and humanly, they being not gods, but
1670 1, 6 | of scribbling faculty,~I humbly place before you.~
1671 1, 5 | and it happens that this humid element, being rarefied
1672 2, 4 | defective look or word should humiliate him or bring him in some
1673 1, 5 | somnis sitiens cum quærit, et humor~Non datur, ardorem in membris
1674 1, 5 | and rich in melancholy humours, and these, if they do not
1675 1, Int | warned of the danger that hung over him by some friends,
1676 2, 1 | he the dumb Protean herd~Hungry pursues, sends forth his
1677 2, 2 | food through some kind of hunting or chase. Therefore it is
1678 1, 4 | straight becomes that which he hunts.~The stag, that towards
1679 1, Int | traces of his visit in some hurried writings. The only work
1680 1, 1 | drives them distracted, and hurries them into excesses, by which
1681 1, 1 | enemy; as nothing is~more hurtful to iron than rust, which
1682 1, 5 | and that through various hypotheses, as with corporeal beauty,
1683 1, Int | elucidated and fixed. From a hypothesis to concentrate and reduce
1684 1, 3 | and dolphin Neptune dwelt;~Ibis and shepherd Mercury became;~
1685 1, 5 | and bitten,~And in the iciness of my divinity find no deliverance,~
1686 2, 1 | subsunt, qui instigant laedere id ipsum,~Quodcunque est, rabies,
1687 1, Int | therefore it behoves us to identify ourselves with this harmony,
1688 1, 1 | the Muses should be, for idleness cannot exist there, where
1689 2, 1 | chalk, and the other, the idol of shame and infamy, knows
1690 1, Int | Fathers, of Plato and St. Ignatius; the other was filled with
1691 2, 3 | highest heaven;~Wherefore, ignited by the fire of love,~Swifter
1692 2, 4 | and pains, and to being ignominiously treated by ignorant peoples
1693 2, 1 | frightful, fatal impetus. Ignoranti portum, nullus suus ventas
1694 1, Int | and he could no longer ignore the peril of his position,
1695 2, 1 | penitas medullas,~Virginum ignoto ferit igne pectus.~[paragraph
1696 1, 5 | thus the body becomes lean, ill-nourished, attenuated, poor in blood,
1697 1, 5 | torment offending souls.~For ill-ordered love has in itself the beginning
1698 2, 1 | this all-unmeasured woe,~Ill-timed reward for such a love as
1699 2, 1 | Quodcunque est, rabies, unde illa haec germina surgant.~Sed
1700 2, 4(1)| much by contemplating the illimitable ocean, out of which, as
1701 1, Int | ignorance, and the upper classes illiterate, uncultivated, and corrupt,
1702 2, 1 | the legend which says: "Illius aram," and then the following: -- ~
1703 2, 5 | remember I~LAO.~74.~Song of the Illuminati:~"I envy not oh Jove, the
1704 1, 5 | respect of the sum, the illuminator of her, she is ever equally
1705 2, 1 | and shine.~And so my soul, illumined. and inflamed.~By radiance
1706 2, 3(1)| eternal, and is simply an illusion, or Maya. ("The Secret Doctrine.")~
1707 2, 1 | of contracting vices and illusions is greater, according to
1708 1, Int | vineyards, he began to see how illusory the judgment of the senses
1709 1, 4 | excites his dogs, is here illustrated by a winged heart, which
1710 2, 3 | not true it is very well imagined if it is not so. it is yet
1711 1, 5 | and the other -- that is, immeasurably, without mercy and unto
1712 2, 4 | nature and being. How can immobility, reality, entity, truth
1713 2, 2 | one and many, movable and immovable because as incorruptible
1714 2, 1 | to it; for from the one immoveable and the same, proceed thoughts
1715 1, 5 | called virtue, nor does it impair the perfection of firmness,
1716 2, 4 | has converted him into impalpable dust, whereas by virtue
1717 2, 1 | brightness which he may impart to those or that he may
1718 2, 1 | produces infinitely, i.e. imparts existence to the universal
1719 1, 3 | shows himself insensible and impassive towards those things which
1720 1, 4 | corporeal), and do not impede my progress upwards to my
1721 2, 3 | First, because such an impediment cannot exist in action.
1722 2, 3(1)| Prima, per che tal impedimento in atto non puo essere se
1723 2, 2(1)| great Keśava~Dost thou impel me to this dreadful fight?~ -- ("
1724 2, 3 | not follow that there is imperfection in the object, nor that
1725 1, 5 | their strength,~And with imperious sov'reignty they rule~And
1726 2, 1 | immobile saxum~Accolet, imperiumque pater romanus habebit.~MAR.
1727 1, 3 | stupidity, and irrational impetuosity, which tend towards savage
1728 1, 2 | mysteries, this sentence: "Impius animam dissidentem habet:
1729 1, 4 | Saduchimi and others, and by implication, Plato, and those who dive
1730 2, 1 | such splendour mate~If it import thee that I live!~Open,
1731 2, 1 | mortal fear, and in his impotence to still the tempest, has
1732 2, 3 | absorbed by it. Here the eyes imprint upon the heart, that is
1733 1, 3 | are not comprehended and imprisoned in the womb of matter, sometimes
1734 1, Int | written down. His mind in the impulsiveness of its improvisation was
1735 2, 2 | truth is sought as a thing inaccessible, as an object not to be
1736 1, 1 | he remained neutral and inactive, rather than operative.
1737 1, 4 | or measure, is immobile, inanimate, and without form, notwithstanding
1738 2, 5 | and minerals working her incantations, would be able to curb nature.
1739 1, Int | Ancona, where he remained incarcerated until the prison of' the
1740 1, Int | Giordano the heretic.~"L'incendio è tal, ch'io m'ardo e non
1741 1, 5 | membris~Possunt, errantes incerti corpore toto.~Denique cum
1742 2, 1 | when he says: -- ~Fluctuat incertis erroribus ardor amantum,~
1743 1, 5 | the one, and the other as incidental to all, seeing that of those
1744 2, 1 | rectitude, while others incite and force in a certain manner
1745 1, 5 | to sadness, one to gaiety inclines;~One labours and one rests;
1746 1, 5 | converted into sighs, if we include those which proceed from
1747 2, 3(1)| Moisture," this trinity including, and being the muse of every
1748 2, 5 | but admit the triumph,~Incomparable end of all the pains~Of
1749 1, 5 | firmness which feels and bears inconveniences, but that which bears them
1750 2, 2 | and immovable because as incorruptible species it is intelligible
1751 2, 3(1)| more its activity would be increased. You will observe that the
1752 1, 5 | Necquiquam, quoniam nihil inde abradere possunt,~Nec penetrare,
1753 1, Int | study he began to long for independence of thought, and becoming,
1754 2, 3 | that Divine love weeps with indescribable, groans, because having
1755 1, 3 | that which forms the limbs indicates the internal and external
1756 1, 3 | beauty, insomuch as it is an indication of beauty of~spirit. Thus
1757 2, 1 | species of things, which are indications of Divine goodness, intelligence,
1758 1, 2 | or picture to which I am indifferent. It would then be a great
1759 2, 4 | ways would treat it with indignity, as has been the case with
1760 2, 1 | will join himself by an indissoluble sacrament to divine things,
1761 1, Int | the Spanish and others, to induce him to return to his allegiance
1762 1, Int | leisure and quiet, far from inducing habits of indolence, or
1763 2, 3 | desires it; and later the industrious intellect procures it, follows
1764 2, 1 | force of vicissitude, it is inevitable that from evil they come
1765 1, 5 | the year~To change the 1 inexorable cross I bear.~Here observe
1766 2, 2 | intelligible species and objects of infallible and sole truth as there
1767 2, 1 | contraction, of which some infamously, others heroically operate,
1768 2, 1 | other, the idol of shame and infamy, knows not that there is
1769 1, 3 | certain potential or relative inference, as one who proposes to
1770 2, 1 | sentence I think may be inferred that which the Nolan said
1771 1, Int | the bands of brigands that infested those lands, until,, arriving
1772 1, 4 | others and yet others ad infinitum.~CIC. How is it that after
1773 1, 5 | and fourthly blazes or inflames that which it has warmed,
1774 1, 4 | power of the senses will inform itself of all that is sensuous,
1775 2, 1 | imbecility of human nature (ingegno) which, intent on the Divine
1776 1, 4 | dogs of Actæon, ah, proud ingrates!~Whom to the abode of my
1777 2, 1 | intelligence found easy ingress through his eyes; that of
1778 1, 5 | spirit and soul come to inhabit it. The enthusiast is that
1779 2, 2 | becomes wild, like a stag, an inhabitant of the woods; he lives god-like
1780 1, 4 | converted into God, and inhabits the intelligible world;
1781 1, Int | always present to us, is inherent in man; it presents itself
1782 1, 5 | where it says that Love has inherited from his mother, Poverty,
1783 1, Int | this was probably only to initiate a quarrel with Bruno,~whom
1784 1, Int | the "Umbrae Idearum" he initiates the work of reconstruction,
1785 1, 1 | separate that which pains and injures me from that which I so
1786 2, 1 | fortune, magnanimous towards injuries, intrepid towards poverty,
1787 2, 1 | dolorem~Corporis, et dentes inlidunt saepe labellis,~Osculaque
1788 1, 1 | lays bare and frets the inmost heart.~Attend now, thou.
1789 1, Int | He went to lodge at an inn, and soon received visits
1790 1, 3 | contemplation and possessing innately a clear intellectual spirit,
1791 1, 5 | fascinations of splendour, goes innocently and amicably to meet its
1792 1, Int | suspect the heretic and the innovator. After five months it behoved
1793 1, 5 | A inveterascit alendo,~Inque dies gliscit furor, atque
1794 2, 4 | there is in meditators and inquirers, because some, according
1795 2, 4 | congregation, others by inquiry and doubt, others by discussions
1796 2, 1 | result soon feel,~Of thy inquisitive temerity.~My cruel fate
1797 2, 4 | fatigue, and study,~ ./. and inquisitorial act to have it, but it is
1798 1, Int | against Giordano Bruno by the Inquisitors, and the depositions and
1799 1, 5 | lucid spirit, may lead to insanity, folly, and brutal fury,
1800 1, 5 | in the middle is the sign inscribed: "Mutuo fulcimur."~CIC.
1801 2, 4 | in that kind of madness, insensibility and blindness, will not
1802 1, 3 | things, and shows himself insensible and impassive towards those
1803 2, 1 | names if Cicero had not inserted it. Many, many years may
1804 2, 3 | resists as much as the other insists, and one assails while the
1805 1, 3 | body or corporeal beauty, insomuch as it is an indication of
1806 2, 1 | the prey, and after three inspections he knows whether be will
1807 2, 3 | itself, incorporate itself, insphere itself, or concentrate itself
1808 1, 5 | iunguntque salivas~Oris, et inspirant pressantes dentibus ora,~
1809 1, 3 | abominated by me -- as, for instance, filthy avarice, base greediness
1810 2, 1 | quick, furtive, sudden and instantaneous. Besides which, we must
1811 2, 1 | before his eyes, he does not instantly pounce upon it?~MAR. No;
1812 1, 5 | adjective from the verb "instare," but it is a noun substantive
1813 2, 1 | Et stimuli subsunt, qui instigant laedere id ipsum,~Quodcunque
1814 1, Int | untiring patience tried to instil into this dull head the
1815 1, Int | with him in Venice, and instruct him in the secrets of science.
1816 2, 1 | is the heroic enthusiast instructed!~V.~CES. Close by is to
1817 1, Int | and he received his first instruction in his father's house and
1818 1, Int | in Rome he learned that instructions for his arrest had been
1819 1, 4 | recall the heart. The soul instructs them how they should conduct
1820 2, 5 | way, singly, playing his instrument, had sung his sistine, they
1821 2, 5 | has been in a certain way instrumental in causing that Divine and
1822 1, 4 | world, and he begins to live intellectually; he lives the life of the
1823 1, 5 | the undertaking and the intelligibility of the writing, alike that
1824 1, 4 | intellect learns things intelligibly -- i.e., in its own way,
1825 1, Int | things on to Frankfort, intending to leave the next day himself;
1826 2, 1 | cornuque recurvo~Tartaream intendit vocem, qua protinus omne~
1827 2, 4 | lost his sight through the intensity of the flame, which, proceeding
1828 1, 4 | highest propositions and intentions, now that those powers of
1829 2, 1 | leviter poenas frangit Venus inter amorem,~Blandaque refraenat
1830 1, Int | things, the dependence and inter-dependence of all things, and of the
1831 1, Int | and which it was to the interest of Rome to destroy. Disappointed
1832 2, 4 | vision. the means, or the intermediary is required between the
1833 1, 4 | actions of this mass are intermittent, weak, and, as it were,
1834 1, 4 | thousand different ways, and internally by natural feebleness. He
1835 1, 5 | means that it is as you interpret it, everlasting.~TANS. Surely,
1836 1, 5 | CIC. I perceive that the interpretation of it will be difficult.~
1837 2, 4 | definitions,~ ./. others by interpretations and decypherings, of voices,
1838 1, Int | trial; Bruno himself, being interrogated, gave ail account in detail
1839 1, 4 | How can I linger in the intimacy of these friendly and dear
1840 1, Int | diverse, are in reality intimately connected with each other --
1841 2, 1 | Contremuit nemus, et silvae intonuere profandae.~ ~The eagle again,
1842 1, 1 | to those who are said to intoxicate him with such exaltation,
1843 2, 3 | become over more and more intoxicated.~ ./. LIB. From this it
1844 2, 1 | comes forth fresh from the intoxication of Lethe, and drenched with
1845 2, 5 | breast, by reason of my intractability, such simple and innocent
1846 1, 3 | the body locally, but as intrinsic form and extrinsic framer,
1847 1, 5 | compassion open the way, and introduce him to that secret chamber.~
1848 1, Int | gave him the opportunity of introducing and discussing the deepest
1849 1, Int | INTRODUCTION.~NOLA, a city founded by
1850 1, 3 | divine spirit and sense intrude, as it would have less power
1851 2, 3 | elements? Where are the inundated banks? Where is he who will
1852 2, 3 | of the stream which Egypt inundates,~Running its sevenfold course
1853 2, 4 | penetrating fire,~For if it should invade and touch you, ye~Would
1854 2, 4 | as it happens to a stupid invalid who does not say that his
1855 1, 5 | not wish to see the motto invalidated by equivocation, by which
1856 2, 4 | said, "Qui quærunt, me, invenient me;" and again -- "Qui sitit,
1857 1, 3 | the imagination is always inventing for itself various images.
1858 1, 1 | more apt at imitation than invention, and they have been used
1859 1, 5 | the pleasure of our own inventions and the consideration of
1860 2, 2 | bring, is peculiar for its inventive reasoning, its suggestiveness,
1861 1, 4 | hand, she descends in an inverse manner to the world of feeling,
1862 1, 5 | and uncertain means, to invest the same or a similar natural
1863 1, Int | bandits and outlaws, who invested Calabria, led by a terrible
1864 1, 5 | Ulcus enim virescit, A inveterascit alendo,~Inque dies gliscit
1865 1, 5 | report his maxims without invidiousness, but there are those who
1866 1, 4 | directs these novel paces, invigorated so as to proceed divinely
1867 1, 1 | not observe the custom of invocation, or because they weave one
1868 1, 1 | calls all the warriors or invokes all the powers; called warriors
1869 1, 3 | himself 1 by means of those inward instincts that, like the
1870 2, 1 | contend with each other inwardly and the vicious enemies
1871 1, Int | heretic.~"L'incendio è tal, ch'io m'ardo e non mi sfaccio."~
1872 2, 4 | Averte oculos tuos a me, quia ipsi me avolare fecere." And
1873 2, 1 | qui instigant laedere id ipsum,~Quodcunque est, rabies,
1874 2, 5 | alternately.~The seventh with the Irish harp:~As day and night succeed
1875 1, Int | of the mind, he found it irksome to go through automatically
1876 1, 3 | involved?~And why to me eternal irksomeness~Flames to my heart, darts
1877 1, 2 | action which might vex or irritate the thing loved. He says,
1878 1, Int | flood, earthquake, and irruptions, transform the earth, so
1879 2, 5 | temperate sky of the British Isles, and come into the presence
1880 1, 5 | from the holes in which, issue in great force a smoky wind,
1881 2, 2 | joined him to her whom be saw issuing from the forest, from the
1882 1, 5 | legend which says: "Idem, itidem non idem." This seems more
1883 1, 5 | Adfigunt avide corpus, iunguntque salivas~Oris, et inspirant
1884 1, 1 | white-wine verses, and of ivy for the bacchanals; of olive
1885 1, 2 | there compels,~And like Ixion I pursue and flee;~For to
1886 2, 2(2)| so to say, mixed with, au(j strengthened by, an essence
1887 1, 5 | she hears thee not, the jade!~Nor flight, nor place,
1888 1, Int | gondola, in the company of~his Jailers, who took him to the prison
1889 1, 5 | flore fruuntur,~Ætatis, dum jam præsagit gaudia corpus,~
1890 2, 5 | was shut against them nor janitor who questioned them. They
1891 1, Int | Venice, towards the end of January 1593, Bruno, in chains,
1892 2, 1 | caves and cheat his cruel jaw.~The whale, ere he the dumb
1893 1, Int | and Silber aus der Masse jener zo ungleich begabten Erzgänge
1894 1, 2 | more, jolly than I am now." John Bruno, father of the Nolano,
1895 2, 3(1)| overcome all obstacles in joining itself to its centre. -- ("
1896 1, 2 | said: "Never was I more, jolly than I am now." John Bruno,
1897 1, Int | eigneten sich die Schriften des Jordanus Brunous von Nola; aber freilich
1898 1, 5 | displeasure that has any power to jostle him c,. dislodge him from
1899 1, 2 | least content and least joyful is in the degree of indifference,
1900 2, 4 | dulls the senses~Of the joyless folk to every other sound,~
1901 1, 1 | turnest into pain thy father's joys,~To evil Argus-eyed, but
1902 1, Int | parts, come to celebrate the jubilee of Pope Clement VIII. Bruno
1903 2, 1(1)| Drummond's "Oedipus Judaicus.")~
1904 1, Int | Bruno was concerned; he judged it prudent to leave Paris,
1905 1, 4 | are bound, and in whose jurisdiction, ministry, and warfare they
1906 2, 1 | how this enthusiast is justified in his anger against those
1907 1, 2 | in the dialogues of the Kabala of the horse Pegasus; and
1908 2, 1 | intense joy, called by the Kabalists, mors osculi, which same
1909 1, 4 | of the soul, which by the Kabbalists is called the death by kisses,
1910 1, Pre | moreover, confess that I am keenly alive to the shortcomings
1911 1, Int | manners, for valour, and for keenness of perception. They were,
1912 2, 2(1)| wherefore, then, great Keśava~Dost thou impel me to this
1913 1, Int | alone can give, this is the keynote of the poem. It is composed
1914 1, 5 | that my haughty soul had killed with scorn,~Love brings
1915 1, 5 | without at the same time kindling the affections. The two
1916 1, Pre | those friends who have so kindly looked over my work from
1917 1, 1 | most mature, yet ought, as kindred of the Muses, to precede
1918 1, 1 | others are by the band of kings, emperors, and popes.~CIC.
1919 1, 1 | yet, notwithstanding its kinship, association, and signification,
1920 1, 4 | the friend says:~Let him kiss me with the kisses of his
1921 2, 5 | majesty, they bent their knee to the earth, and altogether,
1922 2, 4 | sharp point of sword or knife. Hence is derived the form
1923 1, 4 | that dost in punishment~Knit up the soul, spirit and
1924 2, 4 | harassed. weary trunk~Goes knocking at the doors~To meet a death
1925 1, 2 | is eternal.~TANS. Thou knowes't that, as the Platonic
1926 2, 1(1)| know it, and he who is, knoweth it indeed; but he cannot
1927 1, Int | fast mehr als menschliche Kräfte vermögen."'~I believe that
1928 2, 1 | et dentes inlidunt saepe labellis,~Osculaque adfigunt, quia
1929 2, 1 | wounds suddenly and swiftly.~Labitur totas furor in medullas,~
1930 1, 5 | simulacra petit, frustraque laborat,~In medioque sitit torrenti
1931 1, 5 | Then plods again with hard, laborious toil,~Until black night
1932 2, 1 | same; and to one who has laboured to secure the fruits of
1933 1, 5 | languishing in the snow, where a labourer has thrown it, and a naked
1934 1, Int | thread running through the labyrinth of history -- namely, the
1935 1, 2 | reach the gates of hell,~And laden with desire arrive at heaven:~
1936 2, 1 | stimuli subsunt, qui instigant laedere id ipsum,~Quodcunque est,
1937 1, Int | next day he went over the lagoon in a gondola, in the company
1938 1, Int | Bridge of Sighs through the lagoons to Ancona, where he remained
1939 2, 1 | fierce lion roaring from his lair~Spreads horror all around
1940 1, 5 | with cold,~Stiffened the lakes and locked the running streams.~
1941 2, 1 | that above the wolf is Lam, above the lion Modo, above
1942 2, 1 | other species. And this lame proceeds from him, who having
1943 2, 4 | Which calls for heavier lamentation.~Who will deny that nature
1944 1, 2 | he is alive in his own lamentations; and like him who no longer
1945 2, 5 | be named, with tragic and lamenting accents laid bare the common
1946 2, 2(1)| considerazioni da mettere avanti lana di capra, o l'ombra de l'
1947 1, Int | seeks to understand its language; he is a physiologist and
1948 1, Int | he spoke all the European languages; he worked at artillery,
1949 1, Int | leaving the capital of the, Languedoc, he set his face towards
1950 2, 1 | tempestuous waves, and he, languid and tired, has abandoned
1951 1, 4 | intellect, and precedes it as a lantern. The woods, uncultivated
1952 2, 5 | Dialogue.~Interlocutors:~LAODOMIA. GIULIA.~LAO. Some other
1953 2, 3 | Interlocutors:~LIBERIO. LAODONIO.~LIB. Reclining in the shade
1954 2, 4 | does not require a useless lapse of time, fatigue, and study,~ ./.
1955 1, 1 | others, and they are the largest number, call him mad and
1956 2, 3 | the beauteous god to pity?~LAS. If it is not true it is
1957 1, Int | in their true colours, he lashes them with ridicule. In the "
1958 2, 1 | tires; -- (altrui rigor mi lassa)~Love doth exalt and reverence
1959 1, Int | The Waldensians, who had lately been driven out of Piedmont,
1960 1, 1 | coldness of the region and lateness of development, learn little,
1961 1, 5 | qui stinguere possit,~Sed laticum simulacra petit, frustraque
1962 1, Int | religion, and in writing Latin verses; using ever greater
1963 2, 1 | populante venas,~Nec habet latum data plaga frontem;~Sed
1964 2, 2 | it not rather a thing to laugh at than to praise in Archimedes,
1965 1, 5 | one breaks; one weeps, one laughs;~One time to sadness, one
1966 1, 2 | from his eyes; dying in the laughter of others, he is alive in
1967 1, Int | turbid floods, stones, and lava. He contemplates the soul,
1968 1, Int | resting-place -- nowhere to lay his head, no one who could
1969 1, Int | faction more than the Catholic league; and precisely by reason
1970 1, 5 | power; thus the body becomes lean, ill-nourished, attenuated,
1971 1, Int | the sun, and the~flames leapt upwards and mingled with
1972 1, Int | he obtain the faculty of lecturing at the Sorbonne. Nor can
1973 1, 3 | his sister a white bull;~Leda as swan, and Dolida as dragon;~
1974 1, 1 | when he exclaimed:~O Friar Leek! O Poetaster!~That in Milan
1975 2, 1 | stone which is tied to its leg. There is the legend: Scinditur
1976 2, 1 | enterprises, but rather does it lend wings to arrive at these,
1977 1, 3 | and a divine impetus which lends it wings, with which, drawing
1978 1, 5 | are not only equal, the length being equal to the depth
1979 2, 2 | they scourge the skin, and lengthen the beard, they rot, and
1980 1, 4 | such heavy martyrdom, such lengthened pain?~Leave, dear sons,
1981 1, 5 | fixed -- namely, Taurus, Leo, Scorpio, and Aquarius,
1982 1, Int | awaken souls out of their lethargy, to inspire them with the
1983 2, 1 | from the intoxication of Lethe, and drenched with the waves
1984 2, Pre | nine, for it is the ninth letter of the alphabet and the
1985 2, 2 | being a master of belles lettres at Alexandria, he set him
1986 1, Int | books extended through the Levant, Germany, and France, and
1987 2, 1 | haec germina surgant.~Sed leviter poenas frangit Venus inter
1988 2, 2 | round which is written: Levius aura; which means that Divine
1989 1, 5 | certain rigour it tries to liberate itself from defilement,
1990 1, Int | the true redemption the liberation of the soul from error,
1991 2, 3 | Dialogue~Interlocutors:~LIBERIO. LAODONIO.~LIB. Reclining
1992 1, 5 | which are Aries, Cancer, Libra, and Capricorn, but by the
1993 2, 3 | answers if there be any.~LIC. There are some certainly
1994 2, 1 | lights beneath the beauteous lids.~Therefore the troubled
1995 2, Pre | being. . . . Od is the pure life-giving Light or magnetic fluid."~
1996 1, Int | only peaceful ones of his life-he used to think, as he looked
1997 1, Int | adored the veil, but did not lift itself up to the idea behind
1998 1, 5 | dust-encumbered steps,~Thou lightest in the south the Lybian
1999 1, Int | worlds.~As in that same Liguria Columbus first divined~another
2000 1, Int | vessel, and carried to the Ligurian port, where he hoped to
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