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Giordano Bruno
The Heroic Enthusiasts

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(Hapax - words occurring once)


12-busin | buy-disal | disap-gaudi | gedie-ligur | likel-polit | ponde-shutt | sic-vanis | vanit-zone

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2001 | likely 2002 1, 4 | to the human appetite. He likes~better to turn about in 2003 1, 5 | be called long and wide. Likewise is it, as to height in divine 2004 1, 3 | made between loving and liking.~TANS. Truly; because we 2005 1, 5 | time. Read the lines:~39.~Limp snake, that writhest in 2006 1, 4 | in mud than in a bed of linen, he would prefer a sow to 2007 1, 3 | two kinds of knots which link the soul to the body. One 2008 2, 1 | is closely connected and linked with the above; there are 2009 1, 5 | legend there says: "Novae Liparææ æoliæ," because it seems 2010 1, Int | for science. It is also a literary, a philosophical, and a, 2011 1, Int | ignorance, and hypocrisy, in "Lo Spaccio della Bestia Trionfante" 2012 1, 4 | happen by reason and order of local motion, but solely through 2013 1, 3 | soul is not in the body locally, but as intrinsic form and 2014 2, 1 | bowels of the earth -- having located itself in those sacred lights, 2015 2, 1 | the legend: Cui nova plaga loco? Explain what part does 2016 1, Int | religious reform. He went to lodge at an inn, and soon received 2017 1, 1 | blind and sinister,~The loftiest beauty, and my death alone~ 2018 2, 4 | some metaphysicians, others logicians, others grammarians; so 2019 1, Int | the cities of Venetia and Lombardy; and although he contrived 2020 1, Int | that his sufferings in the loneliness of his prison -- and in 2021 2, 4 | this would result in the longed-for vision. You will hear what 2022 2, 1 | You ask in pity, wherefore lookest thou~On that, on which to 2023 1, 4 | effectually comfort my pain, loosening me from the tightened bonds 2024 1, 4 | that heals, that cools, and loosens thee be found?~Here the 2025 2, 1 | earth and sky,~And whales, lords of the seas, come not with 2026 1, 4 | its own nature. Therefore lot the sense feed according 2027 1, 4 | goodness and beauty are more loveable than comprehensible, and 2028 2, 1 | am destroyed ~Ah me! this lowering cloud, this smoky fire of 2029 1, 2 | high as heaven, if I be lowly set.~I cease not to pursue, 2030 2, 3 | possible that, through the lubricant and dark passage of the 2031 1, 5 | soul, or to a clear and lucid spirit, may lead to insanity, 2032 2, 1 | moral philosopher wrote to Lucillus that one must not linger 2033 1, 5 | did not feel the chest, Lucretia the dagger, Socrates the 2034 1, 1 | Ovid, Martial, Hesiod, Lucretius, and many others~as versifiers, 2035 1, 5 | in amore Venus simulacris ludit amantis,~Nec satiare queunt 2036 1, Int | mezzo al mare smaga," he lulled the anguish that lacerated 2037 2, 5 | itself. 1~The sixth with a lute sang:~Thus does a fate benign 2038 1, Int | either to the Catholic or the Lutheran Church, because he professes 2039 1, Int | philosophy to the young Lutherans who attended his lectures; 2040 2, 1(1)| vernal growth, the summer luxuriance of all Opinions, Spiritual 2041 2, 1 | burning Apuleia, or sunbrowned Lybia,~With all that they unto 2042 1, 5 | lightest in the south the Lybian heights.~My moon for my 2043 2, 5 | distress1~The third with the lyre played and sang:~After such 2044 1, 1 | is it, or what means it, Mæcenas,~That none on earth contented 2045 1, Int | or as he said himself, "Maestro delle Arti," which Bruno 2046 2, Pre | several able articles~in the magazines have been published, in 2047 2, 1 | orto, vita e morte a le magioni.~From what we have considered 2048 1, Int | De Anima" and "De Clavis Magis," were lost.~The title, 2049 1, Int | Nola was the only city of Magna Græcia which, in spite of 2050 2, Pre | pure life-giving Light or magnetic fluid."~The notices of the 2051 2, 1 | silence alone it should be magnified1~CES. Not, verily, with 2052 2, 2 | raises him, supports him and magnifies him above all liberty whatsoever.~ 2053 2, 2 | love, he takes occasion to magnify the heart through the thoughts, 2054 2, 1 | non multis! Satis enim magnum alter alteri theatrum sumus."~ 2055 1, 3 | entertain himself with the maids when he is not permitted 2056 1, Int | and shows how at last the mail of intelligence overcomes 2057 1, 5 | of Zeus,~And Juno, most majestic wife of Jove,~These call 2058 2, Pre | primordial Elo-him -- the A-dam,-male and female, or, (scientifically) 2059 1, 1 | of envy, ignorance, and malignity are to be combated. Moreover, 2060 2, 1 | and again: Spiritum, quia mandata tua desiderabam. Then, " 2061 2, 5 | steps,~The second with the mandoline played and sang:~Oh fortunate 2062 2, 1 | and there is the legend. "Manens moveor." What do you mean 2063 1, 4 | me a too unhappy boon;~Ye mangle me, and will that I live 2064 1, 4 | feels herself lacerated and mangled, so that at last she is 2065 1, Int | thirteen years of early manhood, until his intellect strengthened 2066 1, 5 | spectando corpora coram,~Nec manibus quicquam teneris abradere 2067 2, 1 | constat, quid primum oculis, manibusque fruantur:~Quod petiere, 2068 2, 3(1)| over manifesting." This manifestation is triple in its aspects, 2069 1, 4 | stands beholding the figure manifested to the eyes, he does not 2070 2, 3(1)| triple, because it is over manifesting." This manifestation is 2071 2, 4 | reasoning, called metaphysics, manifests itself to those few to whom 2072 1, Int | remarkable for their courteous manners, for valour, and for keenness 2073 2, 2 | Ecce, elongavi fugiens, et mansi in solitudine. Thus the 2074 1, 2 | alloyed gold is not real gold, manufactured wine is not real simple 2075 1, Int | time tutor in the family of Manvissier, who had been recalled from 2076 1, Int | a few books.~He visited Marburg and Wurtemburg, remaining 2077 1, Int | received visits from the Marchese di Vico Napoletano, Pietro 2078 1, Int | a terrible chief called Marcone. The Inquisition stood prepared 2079 1, Int | che i marinari in mezzo al mare smaga," he lulled the anguish 2080 1, 4 | beautiful, which has no margin, nor any boundaries.~CIC. 2081 1, Int | the "dolce sirena che i marinari in mezzo al mare smaga," 2082 1, 4 | able bowmen, draw at the mark,~"Which is the germ of all 2083 2, 2 | is under that yoke, that marriage which has joined him to 2084 1, 1 | and set down Virgil, Ovid, Martial, Hesiod, Lucretius, and 2085 1, Int | Vico Napoletano, Pietro Martire Veimigli, and other refugees, 2086 2, 4(1)| I did see,~This unknown marvel of Thy Form! but fear~   2087 1, Int | Gold and Silber aus der Masse jener zo ungleich begabten 2088 2, 2 | meditators, cultivators of souls, masters, captains, nobles, illustrious 2089 2, 1 | rigour with such splendour mate~If it import thee that I 2090 1, 5 | far as they have the light materially and by participation, receiving 2091 1, 4 | mine,~Ye long to sever the maternal ties~Of the afflicted soul, 2092 2, 4 | dialects, so that some are mathematical philosophers, some metaphysicians, 2093 2, 2 | physics, metaphysics, nor mathematician be found in the body, because 2094 2, 2 | and true. See now, the mathematicians take it for granted, that 2095 1, Int | of logic, the elements of mathematics, and the rudiments of the 2096 2, 2 | circle, or other similar mathesis, as suitable for youth, 2097 2, 3 | Now of this and of other matters we will discourse more at 2098 2, 1(1)| opened unto you. -- ("St. Matthew.")~ 2099 2, 1 | shelter of my port,~And from maturer studies rest awhile:~When, 2100 1, 5 | so much.~TANS. That is a maxim of the Epicureans which, 2101 1, 5 | nor those that report his maxims without invidiousness, but 2102 2, 3(1)| is simply an illusion, or Maya. ("The Secret Doctrine.")~ 2103 | maybe 2104 2, 1 | honoured, and of which thou mayest boast. The same might Homer 2105 1, 3 | understandest well; but thou mayst also understand, by the " 2106 2, 2 | multitude, the number (of) measures, and the number (of) moment 2107 1, 5 | thou wandering phœnix!~That measurest thy days as does the world~ 2108 2, 2 | There must be artisans, mechanics, agriculturists, servants, 2109 2, 2 | mind, not to make himself a mediator, but judge and censor of 2110 1, 5 | be a more real and true medicine for an enthusiastic heart 2111 1, 2 | not in the temperance of mediocrity, but, in the excess of contradictions, 2112 1, 5 | frustraque laborat,~In medioque sitit torrenti flumine potans:~ 2113 2, 3 | leave it to be searched for, meditated upon and understood, by 2114 1, 2 | now most dejected through meditating on the high intelligence, 2115 2, 3(1)| obstacle which the fire meets with would serve only to 2116 1, Int | zu bringen erfordert fast mehr als menschliche Kräfte vermögen."'~ 2117 1, Int | surprised the world with the melody of his songs; being, as 2118 1, 1 | on one side by the tragic Melpomene, with more matter than spirit, 2119 2, 1 | While I dissolve and melt and am destroyed ~Ah me! 2120 1, 5 | Thou dost become congealed. Melting am I.~I like thy rigours, 2121 2, 1 | possunt,~Nulla dies nunquam memori vos eximet sevo,~Dum domus 2122 2, 2 | with all this we crowd our memories with genealogies: this one 2123 2, 1 | is greater than that of a mendicant who is in peril of losing 2124 1, Int | Paris efforts were made~by Mendoza, the Spanish and others, 2125 1, Int | erfordert fast mehr als menschliche Kräfte vermögen."'~I believe 2126 1, 5 | sibi, atque alio convertere mentem,~Nec servare sibi curam 2127 1, 3 | CIC. Why, then, does be mention that conception as the object, 2128 2, 4 | more profound.~Here are mentioned nine reasons, which are 2129 2, 5 | of kindness soften it,~Be merciful to us,~And with thy magic 2130 1, 3 | dwelt;~Ibis and shepherd Mercury became;~Bacchus a grape; 2131 2, 1(1)| which has created it, as a mere subject for the grave experiment 2132 2, 3(1)| effulgence and glory, is merely a mass of shadows, as it 2133 1, Int | physiologist and a naturalist, merged in the mystic and the enlightened 2134 2, 1 | the Muses, for this alone merited, that the genius of so many 2135 2, 5 | describe the joy and exulting merriment of voices of spirit and 2136 1, 5 | sake of getting out of the mesh, read the stanza:~38.~One 2137 1, 2 | and are entangled in the meshes of love, some aim at enjoying, 2138 2, 1 | The meaning of all this is metaphorical, like the rest, and may 2139 1, 4 | incited physically, but metaphysically, and is not from imperfect 2140 2, 4 | mathematical philosophers, some metaphysicians, others logicians, others 2141 2, 1 | us go on and read it.~53.~Methought to leave the shelter of 2142 2, 4(1)| things. -- ("Encyclopædia Metropolitiana.")~ 2143 2, 2(1)| au le considerazioni da mettere avanti lana di capra, o 2144 1, 2 | poet when he says:~Hinc metuunt cupiuntque, dolent gaudentque, 2145 1, Int | faculties. After the Cosmos, the Microcosm; after the infinitely~great, 2146 2, 1 | a dog appear~At dawn, at midday, and dark night.~That which 2147 2, 1 | dolce, dolci dardi,~Dolci mie piaghe, miei dolci dolori!~ 2148 2, 1 | dardi,~Dolci mie piaghe, miei dolci dolori!~X.~CES. It 2149 1, 1 | Leek! O Poetaster!~That in Milan didst buckle on thy wreath~ 2150 1, 5 | read the lines.~TANS.:~31.~Mild are thy rays, oh, Sol! from 2151 1, Int | the city of Nola, twelve miles from Naples. There was I 2152 1, 5 | placed before the eyes of the militant thoughts, enlivens, encourages, 2153 2, 5 | chance to move thy heart,~Or milk of kindness soften it,~Be 2154 1, Int | and intellectual world, millions of stars and suns are produced 2155 2, 1 | thoughts, holy desires, and mina intent~Upon the labours 2156 2, 5 | present who, with plants and minerals working her incantations, 2157 1, Int | flames leapt upwards and mingled with his ardent rays; Bruno 2158 2, 4(1)| of Thy Form! but fear~  Mingles with joy! Retake,~  Dear 2159 1, 1 | but blind as mole to good.~Minister of torment! Jealousy!~Fetid 2160 2, 5 | of many other deities who ministered unto her. Then, received 2161 1, 1 | cannot exist there, where the ministers and servants of envy, ignorance, 2162 1, 4 | and in whose jurisdiction, ministry, and warfare they find themselves. 2163 2, 4 | Interlocutors:~SEVERINO. MINUTOLO.~SEV. You will see the origin 2164 1, 1 | permeating all and producing miraculous effects.~CIC. Much of this, 2165 1, 1 | praising them and setting as mirrors and exemplars for political 2166 1, 1 | one, on which do wait~The mirth and melancholy of my state!~ 2167 2, 4 | to prevent his coming to mischief in any encounter, while 2168 1, 5 | quæ vento spes captat sæpe misella.~Ut bibere in somnis sitiens 2169 1, 4 | poverty, my unhappiness and misery; why does not this too leave 2170 1, 3 | cheered by troubles and misfortunes.~CIC. It is a very proper 2171 1, 3 | as a furtive eagle saw;~Mnemosyne as shepherd; Danae gold;~ 2172 1, 5 | within that breast,~With moans and sobs and bitter sighs 2173 1, 5 | divine wisdom is extremely mobile, as Solomon said, and also 2174 1, Int | worked at artillery, at models of fortresses, and at the 2175 1, 2 | depressed nor elated, but is moderate in inclinations and temperate 2176 1, Int | Italy, both ancient and modern. The method of Pythagoras 2177 1, Int | remuneration he received; but this modest employment did not occupy 2178 2, Pre | his subject, and has any modesty, is aware that there are 2179 1, 5 | and fills the sails, and modifies this compound, so that it 2180 2, 1 | wolf is Lam, above the lion Modo, above the dog Praeterea, 2181 2, 1 | way, so that much-praised Mœcenatus, who, if he had had no other 2182 2, 4 | compressed because all the moist substance, whose office 2183 1, Int | was there received in the monastery of the Minerva. A few days 2184 1, 5 | Here is a better smith and Mongibello 1~A better anvil, better 2185 1, 3 | and overcomes the horrid monsters, and however much he may 2186 1, Int | scattered them in the wind. A month later, the Bishop of Sidonia 2187 1, 3 | with evil." In the opposite mood was he, either through some 2188 1, 1 | Now surely he of divers moods, which he exhibits in various 2189 1, Int | physics, metaphysics, and morals; the true aim being illumination, 2190 2, 1 | amorem,~Blandaque refraenat morsus admixta voluptas;~Namque 2191 1, 5 | the poison, Anaxagoras the mortar, Scævola the fire, Cocles 2192 2, 1 | Peior est morte timor ipse mortis. He already suffers, through 2193 2, 4 | Jealousy, the which is like a moth, which has the same subject, 2194 1, 1 | low, ignoble, and unworthy motor, but a noble lord and chief. 2195 2, 1 | the sanctified deity, all mounted to the skies, through the 2196 2, 1 | burning stars receives~With mournful joy in sweetest agony,~Forbid 2197 2, 1 | there is the legend. "Manens moveor." What do you mean by that?~ 2198 | Mrs 2199 2, 1 | a contrary way, so that much-praised Mœcenatus, who, if he had 2200 1, 4 | better to turn about in mud than in a bed of linen, 2201 1, 5 | Atque in eo est Venus, ut muliebria conserat arva,~Adfigunt 2202 1, 5 | passive, which is uncertain, multifarious, and multiform, and the 2203 1, 5 | uncertain, multifarious, and multiform, and the higher intellect, 2204 2, 2 | that other is occupied in multiplying childish sophisms, and we 2205 2, 1 | to him: "Haec tibi, non multis! Satis enim magnum alter 2206 2, 3(1)| plane and world of the Anima Mundi. -- ("The Secret Doctrine.")~ 2207 1, 5 | avail~Peace to restore; murderous yet innocent;~Which, open 2208 1, 1 | wings, he burns my heart,~He murders it, and she revives the 2209 2, 1 | smoke, and sombre fog of murky hue~Concealing thus his 2210 2, 5 | storm-beaten rocks, the murmur of the sea waves which break 2211 1, Int | relative. Beyond and above this mutability there must be the Immutable, 2212 2, 1 | myself:~The farther from myself-the nearer unto him;~The nearer 2213 1, Int | naturalist, merged in the mystic and the enlightened devotee.~ 2214 1, Int | veils with allegories, with myths and mysteries, which they 2215 2, 1 | saeva e speculis tempus dea nacta, nocendi,~Ardua tecta petit, 2216 2, 1 | morsus admixta voluptas;~Namque in eo spes est, unde est 2217 1, Int | from the Marchese di Vico Napoletano, Pietro Martire Veimigli, 2218 2, 2 | beauteous nymphs, with air of nascent bells.~Then said I unto 2219 2, 3(1)| Ch'il coperto terren natura aborre.~ 2220 1, Int | is a physiologist and a naturalist, merged in the mystic and 2221 1, Int | propitious to study. The, Neapolitan provinces were disturbed 2222 1, 5 | body are covered with a nebulous veil, the soul, through 2223 2, 4 | and differently must,~ ./. necessarily be blind as regards that 2224 1, 1 | greatest good, for needs or necessities bring forth labours and 2225 1, 5 | pressantes dentibus ora,~Necquiquam, quoniam nihil inde abradere 2226 1, 5 | atque ærumna gravescit.~Nee Veneris fructu caret is, 2227 2, 2(2)| that can furnish this needed consciousness on the plane 2228 2, 2 | clearing away by means of negations of every kind and discourses 2229 1, 3 | but a memory; they are not neglect of one's self, but love 2230 1, 4 | him into the doubtful and neglected~Upon the track of savage 2231 2, 2 | through avarice or through negligence, or indolence, become in 2232 2, 1 | he had appeared weak and negligent1~Then, when he first felt 2233 1, 2 | after supper, a certain neighbour of ours said: "Never was 2234 1, Int | of the inhabitants; the neighbouring provinces were still more 2235 2, 3(1)| Nel mezzo.~ 2236 2, 1 | che son molti; e non sia nemico di molti per che son dissimili), 2237 2, 1 | protinus omne~Contremuit nemus, et silvae intonuere profandae.~ ~ 2238 2, 5 | shores,~Where, with the Nereias, maybe seen~'The rapid torrent 2239 2, 4 | devouring fire, strong nerve,~Sharp wound, impious ardour, 2240 1, Int | the Riviera: this town, nestled in a little bay surrounded 2241 2, 2 | why, having spread their nets to the wind, they find their 2242 1, 1 | between the two, he remained neutral and inactive, rather than 2243 2, 2 | confounded, so that a sort of neutrality would supervene, and a brutal 2244 2, 5 | found more blest then I~Fate nevermore permits,~My treasures with 2245 2, 5 | lost, the other that of the newly discovered light which alone 2246 1, 4 | my heart;~At least bring news of that,~Which unto him 2247 1, 3 | It is a very proper and nice distinction that is made 2248 1, 5 | ora,~Necquiquam, quoniam nihil inde abradere possunt,~Nec 2249 1, 5 | facie, pulchroque colore~Nil datur in corpus præter simulacra 2250 2, Pre | sentence from an article in the Nineteenth Century, September, 1889, 2251 2, 2 | of: Cor est fons vitae. Nix est alba, ergo cornix est 2252 2, 1 | speculis tempus dea nacta, nocendi,~Ardua tecta petit, stabuli 2253 2, 4 | are accustomed to great noises, do not hear the lesser, 2254 1, 3 | disposition, I believe, was the Nola-no when he said:~14.~Woe's 2255 2, 2 | second mode it has more of non-entity than of entity; seeing that 2256 1, 5 | must ever chafe~At morning, noon-day, evening, and at night.~ 2257 1, 2 | no other than vanity and nothingness, because time has to eternity 2258 2, Pre | or magnetic fluid."~The notices of the press upon the first 2259 2, 4(1)| at first proceeded, as by noticing the obvious fact, that moisture 2260 2, 2 | propose definitions~and notions, certain fifth entities 2261 1, 3 | Wearied, my soul cares nought~That I opposing counsels 2262 2, 2 | the corporeal; seeing that nourishment is taken for no other reason, 2263 2, 1 | which is the legend: Cui nova plaga loco? Explain what 2264 1, 4 | runs and directs these novel paces, invigorated so as 2265 1, Int | the universal soul. The novelty and boldness of his opinions 2266 | nowhere 2267 2, 2 | power of contemplating the nude Diana and who, entranced 2268 2, 1 | impetus. Ignoranti portum, nullus suus ventas est. Behold 2269 2, 2 | That she alone of all the numberless,~That hold within their 2270 2, 2 | unity, said Plato, not the numerical multitude that holds the 2271 2, 1 | pursues, sends forth his nuncio,~From caves of Thetys spouts 2272 2, 1 | carmina possunt,~Nulla dies nunquam memori vos eximet sevo,~ 2273 2, 4 | one in darkness reared,~Nurtured beneath the black Cimmerian 2274 2, 4 | converted into sweet and proper nutriment, and on the other hand, 2275 2, 1 | bark, and to the slender oar~Didst set thy unskilled 2276 2, 3 | through you~I in the body am: oat of it with the sun.~I am 2277 1, 4 | can be felt, the flesh be obedient to the? law of the spirit, 2278 2, 5 | nine), having made humble obeisance, and the nymphs having received 2279 1, 3 | that is beheld, adored, and obeyed; in the second is contemplated 2280 2, 3(1)| every natural body to become objective: privation, form and matter. 2281 2, 2 | as an object not to be objectized, incomprehensible. But yet, 2282 2, 1 | stars and deified by the oblation of praise which has lighted 2283 2, 1 | praise is one of the greatest oblations that human affection can 2284 1, 3 | cease from acknowledging the obligation he is under to love, nor 2285 2, 1 | its presence darkens and obliterates all lights.~CES. To the 2286 2, 2 | goddess," that is, the care or observation of every other kind, as 2287 1, Int | connects these with scientific observations and social practice. Bruno 2288 2, 2 | another tries to revive obsolete vocabularies which, because 2289 1, 3 | because sometimes through occasional impediments he Ends himself 2290 1, 1 | innumerable others for other occasions; and, if it please you, 2291 2, 1 | splendour of the sciences and of occultism, so that he considered that 2292 1, Int | philosophy, hoped to get occupation as press reader; but it 2293 1, Int | of his wanderings, of his occupations and works: serene and dignified 2294 1, 4 | Which overshadows and which occupies my thought,~Go swiftly, 2295 1, Int | modest employment did not occupy him sufficiently, and he 2296 2, 3 | which is hid -- ~Is seed of oceans. Neptune, if by fate~His 2297 2, 4 | sensitive cognition, or ocular vision, at the same time 2298 2, 1 | Nec constat, quid primum oculis, manibusque fruantur:~Quod 2299 2, 4 | says the Psalm: "Averte oculos tuos a me, quia ipsi me 2300 1, 5 | beautiful, others stupid, odious, and ugly. We must then 2301 2, 1(1)| zodiac. -- (Drummond's "Oedipus Judaicus.")~ 2302 2, 4 | great love which He fears to offend by His temerity. Whence 2303 2, 1 | Himself~adored, He is not offended. For we have a charge from 2304 1, 1 | supply your functions and offices; yet, O Fate! thou art none 2305 2, 1 | before him, or Eneas and his offspring before Virgil; as that moral 2306 1, 1 | is to be supposed that he oftimes and for divers reasons had 2307 1, 5 | than any herb, mineral, oil, or other sort of thing 2308 1, 1 | ivy for the bacchanals; of olive for sacrifice and laws; 2309 2, 3(1)| se non posti in atto tali oltraggiosi ripari. Does this mean that 2310 1, Int | and the saintly heroism of Olympus and of Calvary, of Homer 2311 2, 2(1)| avanti lana di capra, o l'ombra de l'asino.~ 2312 1, 2 | Yes, for so much purity (omestà) robs me of my boldness.~ 2313 2, 1 | intendit vocem, qua protinus omne~Contremuit nemus, et silvae 2314 2, 2 | Empedocles considered that the omnipotent and all-producing divinity 2315 1, 2 | fear of offending purity (l'onestade). He does not venture to 2316 2, 4 | The eighth blind man.~Vile onslaught, evil struggle, unrighteous 2317 2, 2 | were always progressing onwards to where it was predominant, 2318 2, 2 | things, light which is in the opacity of matter, that is to say, 2319 1, 1 | truth I do discern,~Thou openest the black diamond doors;~ 2320 2, 1 | tibi; and again: Os meum operui; and again: Spiritum, quia 2321 1, 1 | designs,~Would have all those opponents dead or gone;~One object 2322 1, 5 | most tranquil life, said opportunely:~Sed fugitare decet simulacra, 2323 1, 5 | and sobs and bitter sighs opprest.~Turbulent brothers of the 2324 1, 5 | inspirant pressantes dentibus ora,~Necquiquam, quoniam nihil 2325 2, 1 | with rest, seeing that in orbicular motion upon its own axis 2326 1, 5 | edifices, towers, gardens, and orchards, which are above the clouds, 2327 2, 1 | together to the shades of Orcus, so that naught is the glory 2328 1, 3 | which they see more than ordinarily; and they come in the end 2329 1, Int | transformation of species and of the organic unity of the animal world; 2330 2, 2 | methods, systems of science, organs, and other preambles, is 2331 1, 5 | time the day removes the orient vault,~The rustic peasant 2332 1, 5(1)| Quando il sen d'oriente il giorno sgombra.~ 2333 1, 1 | work shines more by its originality than by its conventionality.~ 2334 2, 1 | with the substantially, originally, primitively beautiful? 2335 1, 4 | a law of the author and originator of Nature. Sin on then, 2336 2, 1 | spes est, unde est ardoris origo,~Restingui quoque posse 2337 1, 5 | corpus, iunguntque salivas~Oris, et inspirant pressantes 2338 2, 5 | themselves in a very richly ornamented room, where with royal majesty, ( 2339 2, 1 | If decked in divers forms ornate she come~Through vows I 2340 1, 1 | who, unlike Homer, Hesiod, Orpheus, and others, could not sing 2341 1, 5 | paragraph continues] "Novae ortae aeoliae." I would like to 2342 2, 2 | upon the false or the true orthography, and so on, with various 2343 2, 1 | ha qualunque stassi~Do l'orto, vita e morte a le magioni.~ 2344 2, 1 | siue aqua tibi; and again: Os meum operui; and again: 2345 1, 1 | matter, it came to pass that, oscillating between the two, he remained 2346 2, 1 | inlidunt saepe labellis,~Osculaque adfigunt, quia non est pura 2347 2, 1 | called by the Kabalists, mors osculi, which same is eternal life, 2348 2, 1 | vestments, for God is naked; nor ostentation and fame, for He shows Himself 2349 2, 5 | Should make appear all other-having, Tile,~And every torment 2350 1, 4 | rightly. From this ~thou oughtest to learn that doctrine taken 2351 2, 2 | it must be said that the outcome of the mind is that alone 2352 1, 4 | shall bring me into those outer and inner courts where I 2353 1, Int | by hordes of bandits and outlaws, who invested Calabria, 2354 1, 4 | not just that the sense outrage the law of reason. And verily 2355 2, 1 | vicious enemies dispute outwardly, so much the more should 2356 2, 1 | things divine, but we cannot oven think of them without detracting 2357 1, 3 | fearless one?~Turn back. Such over-boldness rarely grief escapes."~Fear 2358 1, 2 | might be in the one would be overbalanced by the good in the other. 2359 2, 1 | point to despise and not to overestimate every labour, so that, the 2360 2, 3 | earth~Must lose the glorious overflow?~How is it that we do not 2361 1, Int | country, which was then overrun with Spaniards and scourged 2362 1, 3 | corporeal beauty which might overshadow his thought and appear superficially 2363 1, 4 | away unto that region~Which overshadows and which occupies my thought,~ 2364 1, Int | but Bruno, declined these overtures, and soon after left Paris 2365 1, 1 | poet, and set down Virgil, Ovid, Martial, Hesiod, Lucretius, 2366 1, 3 | I thank thee, love, and owe thee much,~That thou my 2367 2, Pre | does not feel how much he owes to the writers who have 2368 1, Int | the original, and would, owing to the unusual and often 2369 1, Int | visit the University of Oxford, and opened his lectures 2370 2, Pre | Secret Doctrine," by H. P. Blavstsky, "There exists 2371 1, 5 | fugitare decet simulacra, et pabula amoris~Abstergere sibi, 2372 1, 4 | and directs these novel paces, invigorated so as to proceed 2373 2, 1 | absolutely from a homœogeneous (pacifico) principle, but all from 2374 1, Int | there. Levi devotes many pages to the accusations brought 2375 2, 1 | they are depicted with a pair of wings, by means of which 2376 2, 5 | became visible to them a palace, which, whoever had knowledge 2377 1, Int | other, and the poet dwelt in palaces and received the caress 2378 2, 3 | order that it should not pall, nor disgust, presents itself 2379 1, Int | reformed intellect and by a palpable and well-considered enthusiasm, 2380 1, Int | colony who had fled from papal persecution to this stronghold 2381 2, 1 | says: Neque simile, nec par mar.~43.~MAR.: ~This phœnix 2382 1, 5 | tangent strikes,~Fatigued and parched, he sits him in the shade; ~ ./. 2383 2, 3 | Who of the sea the double parent are?~So senseless thou'rt 2384 1, 5 | are certain vapours, which partake of both, which leave the 2385 1, 5 | is like the moon, which partakes of no other species but 2386 1, 4 | in possession, and who, partially possessing, is not content, 2387 1, 5 | particular form may have participated, he can understand all, 2388 1, 2 | consequently no one who participates, can be wise; in short, 2389 1, 3 | receive, and that it is a participator in that ultimate enthusiasm 2390 1, 4 | tyrannize over the other, particularly where the intellect is a 2391 1, 4 | if they~be occult as to particulars, they are not occult as 2392 1, Int | Bruno showed himself no partisan of either the Platonic or 2393 1, 4 | inferior things, which she partly shows, saying, When shall 2394 2, 4 | Meanwhile he prays the passers-by to prevent his coming to 2395 1, Int | they all tend with infinite passional ardour. For in this centre, 2396 1, 5 | the fly. "Hostis," the fly passively; "non hostis," actively. " 2397 2, 1 | Is that which thou for pastime didst entrust~To hostile 2398 1, 1 | highest priest nor great pastòr,~Has given to me such graces, 2399 2, 1 | stabuli et de culmine summo~Pastorale canit signum, cornuque recurvo~ 2400 2, 1 | of now, and of to come,~Pat me in fear, in anguish and 2401 2, 1 | saxum~Accolet, imperiumque pater romanus habebit.~MAR. I 2402 1, Int | passed his childhood. His paternal home was situated at the 2403 2, 1 | feel.~And that I may my pathways clearly see,~Let doubts 2404 1, Int | philosopher with untiring patience tried to instil into this 2405 1, 4 | heart that gently suffers, patiently burns and constantly perseveres 2406 1, 5 | in the worst diseases the patients benefit more by believing 2407 1, Int | always regarded Nola with patriotic pride, and he received his 2408 1, 5 | conform himself to a divine pattern, diverting the sight from 2409 2, 2(1)| then face to face. -- ("St. Paul to the Corinthians.")~ 2410 1, 2 | heaven and from hell,~No pause nor rest my torments know,~ 2411 2, 5 | the everlasting laws,~And pauses alternating,~Amongst my 2412 1, 5 | and yet diminish not.~Thus pay I to the air, the sea, the 2413 1, Int | and demanded two scudi in payment for having degraded Fra 2414 1, 1 | converse and nourish me,~Where peacefully I ponder and grow fair;~ 2415 1, 5 | orient vault,~The rustic peasant leaves his humble home,~ 2416 2, 1 | Virginum ignoto ferit igne pectus.~[paragraph continues] As 2417 2, 2 | have wings. We see that pedantry has never been held in such 2418 2, 1 | Adorabimus ubi steterunt pedes eius.~CES. God, the divine 2419 1, Int | flames, stands out as on a pedestal, and dies serene and calm. 2420 2, 1 | says: Adorate sgabellum pedum eius. And in another place 2421 1, 2 | the Kabala of the horse Pegasus; and as says the wise Solomon, " 2422 2, 1 | worse than evil itself. Peior est morte timor ipse mortis. 2423 2, 2 | si sapis, o puella, ride,~Pelignus, puto, dixerat poeta;~Sed 2424 1, 6 | holds you, Nor would our pen abase you~More than it must -- 2425 1, 3 | and, like the suitors of Penelope, he entertain himself with 2426 1, 5 | inde abradere possunt,~Nec penetrare, et abire in corpus corpore 2427 1, 3 | spirit and the most acute and penetrative senses; whence it follows 2428 2, 1 | frontem;~Sed vorat tectas penitas medullas,~Virginum ignoto 2429 1, 1 | salad, sausage, and the pepper-caster.~CIC. Now surely he of divers 2430 1, 3 | so that, although reason perceives the evil and unworthiness 2431 2, 1 | my lady fair~Comes back perforce to her, my goddess dear.~[ 2432 1, 5 | earth, on account of the periodical changes which both experience 2433 1, Int | either the Platonic or the Peripatetic~school; he was not exclusive 2434 1, 1 | and opens the intellect, permeating all and producing miraculous 2435 2, 5 | blest then I~Fate nevermore permits,~My treasures with thine 2436 1, 3 | through the changes which permutably succeed, they return again 2437 1, 5 | because I do not intend to perorate upon the entire physics; 2438 2, 1 | straight from the nest in a perpendicular line upwards, and generally 2439 1, Int | beginning to tire of this perpetually wandering life, and after 2440 2, 2 | the specific substantial perpetuator of the eternal generation 2441 1, Int | of science, was rejected, persecuted, and scourged, and only 2442 1, Int | for a time to evade his persecutors, he~finally decided to leave 2443 1, 4 | patiently burns and constantly perseveres in the work, fears that 2444 1, 5 | vitam; non ad horam."~TANS. Persistence in such a love and ardent 2445 1, 5 | that love as an instant, or persisting, persists; which has the 2446 2, 4 | notwithstanding that the person may not himself perceive 2447 2, 1(1)| But not till the whole personality of the man is dissolved 2448 1, 5 | with greater truth than perspicacity the sense of the figure.~ 2449 1, 1 | sing worthily of things pertaining to heroes, substituting 2450 2, 2 | loosened from the knots of perturbation of the~senses, free from 2451 2, 3 | for governance;~But thou, perverter of eternal law,~Hast tamed 2452 2, 1 | manibusque fruantur:~Quod petiere, premunt arte, faciuntque 2453 1, Int | was impossible. "Altiora, Peto" was Bruno's motto, and 2454 1, Int | Spaniards and scourged by petty tyrants; and with the lower 2455 2, 5 | Apollo was found again by Phaeton;) appears she, who if; called 2456 2, 4 | philosopher speculation of phantoms, and by the theologian, 2457 1, 5 | 29.~Unconquered victor of Pharsalia,~Though all thy warriors 2458 2, 3(1)| being the muse of every phenomenon in Nature. -- ("The Secret 2459 2, 3 | Now I will not begin to philosophize about the identity of opposites 2460 2, 1 | are darts of Diana, or of Phœbus, that is, either from the 2461 1, 5 | what is the meaning of the phrase "love endures as an instant?"~ 2462 1, 5 | more by means of faith than physicians by the truth; and in the 2463 1, 2 | because matter, as say the physicists, with that measure with 2464 1, Int | understand its language; he is a physiologist and a naturalist, merged 2465 2, 1 | dolci dardi,~Dolci mie piaghe, miei dolci dolori!~X.~CES. 2466 1, 3 | sees the lord of all those pictures, who is of a beauty incomparably 2467 2, 1 | trunk of a tree, or cast a piece of chalk, and the other, 2468 2, 2 | and turning and tearing to pieces and placing embankments 2469 1, Int | Marchese di Vico Napoletano, Pietro Martire Veimigli, and other 2470 1, Int | morning towards the funeral pile. Brightly shone the sun, 2471 1, Int | year 1600. Rome was full of pilgrims from all parts, come to 2472 1, Int | another hemisphere outside the Pillars of Hercules, so Bruno discovered 2473 1, 5 | the forge, the hammer, the pincers, and other instruments which 2474 2, 1 | were in consequence most pious, he made that prophetic 2475 1, 5 | voice she will not hear,~Nor pitifully will she turn to note my 2476 2, 1 | shores to reach,~Vainly from pitying hands invoke some aid,~And 2477 2, 2 | and tearing to pieces and placing embankments so that the 2478 1, 3 | seditions, destructions, and plagues, as it is spiritual, through 2479 2, 5 | with that which they saw so plainly, until at last, the impetus 2480 1, 3 | chains.~If it be sweet in plaintiveness to droop,~Why does that 2481 1, 2 | fill the air with clamorous plaints.~Water my eyes distil, sparks 2482 2, 1 | the rays from the great planet sent,~Should number those 2483 1, 5 | twenty-four hours, and with the planetary movement in twelve months, 2484 1, 5 | enthusiast where, by a cleverly planned allurement being caught 2485 2, 5 | one in this way, singly, playing his instrument, had sung 2486 1, 5 | in the shade; ~ ./. Then plods again with hard, laborious 2487 2, 5 | with great labour having ploughed the seas, passed over rivers, 2488 1, 1 | how enthusiasm is born, by ploughing the field of the Muses and 2489 1, 2 | and they are incited to pluck the apple from the tree 2490 2, Pre | in one of which, by C. E. Plumptre (Westminster Review, August, 2491 2, 1 | MAR. Certainly not! but by plunging into the depths of the mind, 2492 1, Int | of the earth and of the plurality of worlds.~As in that same 2493 1, 5 | Sed potius, quæ sunt, sine poena, commoda sumit.~CIC. What 2494 2, 1 | germina surgant.~Sed leviter poenas frangit Venus inter amorem,~ 2495 2, 2 | Pelignus, puto, dixerat poeta;~Sed non dixerat omnibus 2496 1, 1 | exclaimed:~O Friar Leek! O Poetaster!~That in Milan didst buckle 2497 2, 1 | whole forest, like to the poetic description of the fury-hunter.~ 2498 2, Pre | correction of every error that is pointed out to him by an honest 2499 1, 1 | mirrors and exemplars for political and civil actions.~CIC. 2500 1, Int | philosophers, of free-thinkers, and politicians, who repudiated every positive


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