12-busin | buy-disal | disap-gaudi | gedie-ligur | likel-polit | ponde-shutt | sic-vanis | vanit-zone
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Part, Dialogue grey = Comment text
2501 1, 1 | nourish me,~Where peacefully I ponder and grow fair;~I rise, I
2502 1, Int | during the early part of the pontificate of Gregory XIV. that Bruno
2503 2, 5 | pains~Of field and mount,~Of pools and streams and seas,~Of
2504 1, 1 | of kings, emperors, and popes.~CIC. Explain to me what
2505 1, 1 | for sacrifice and laws; of poplar, of elm, and of corn for
2506 2, 1 | in medullas,~Igne furtivo populante venas,~Nec habet latum data
2507 2, 2 | common, ordinary, civil, and popular, he becomes wild, like a
2508 2, 1 | Democritus says: "Unus mihi pro populo est, et populus pro uno;
2509 2, 1 | mihi pro populo est, et populus pro uno; and what Epicurus
2510 1, Pre | decided to publish that portion of it which I have finished.~
2511 2, 2 | entities and other abortive portions of fantastical cogitations,
2512 1, 5 | Thou art the veritable portrait of my faith,~Which, fixed,
2513 1, 5 | next.~II.~TANS. Close by is portrayed one who has on his shield
2514 2, 1 | the legend. Fluctuat in portu. Deliberate about the signification
2515 2, 1 | fatal impetus. Ignoranti portum, nullus suus ventas est.
2516 2, 1 | origo,~Restingui quoque posse ab eodem corpore flammam.~[
2517 1, 4 | of life? To what use do I possess these natural powers if
2518 2, 2 | than otherwise he could possibly have been. He speaks of
2519 1, 5 | in membris qui stinguere possit,~Sed laticum simulacra petit,
2520 2, 3(1)| atto non puo essere se non posti in atto tali oltraggiosi
2521 1, 5 | medioque sitit torrenti flumine potans:~Sic in amore Venus simulacris
2522 1, 5 | that part of the superior potentialities where the vigorous impulse
2523 1, 2 | nec secum ipse convenire potest, neque cum aliis."~TANS.
2524 1, 5 | is, qui vitat amorem,~Sed potius, quæ sunt, sine poena, commoda
2525 2, 1 | eyes, he does not instantly pounce upon it?~MAR. No; unless
2526 2, 3 | fountain of Amphitrite,~Which pours so great a flood across
2527 1, Int | indolence, or the sterile practices of asceticism, were stimulants
2528 1, 5 | itself in its own country practised, expert, and ready -- revolt
2529 1, 5 | fruuntur,~Ætatis, dum jam præsagit gaudia corpus,~Atque in
2530 1, 5 | colore~Nil datur in corpus præter simulacra fruendum~Tenuia,
2531 2, 1 | lion Modo, above the dog Praeterea, which are words signifying
2532 1, Int | earning his bread by teaching.~Prague and Frankfort were next
2533 2, 2 | fons vitae alba, and one prattles about the noun; was it first,
2534 2, 4(1)| God! See me, see what thou prayest!~ * * * *~
2535 2, 2 | some are low, others are pre-eminent, some serve and some obey,
2536 1, 1 | Fate is none other than the pre-ordained disposition and order of
2537 1, 4 | primary, and whose word and pre-ordaining is the true doing and beginning.
2538 1, Int | Calvinists of that city, who preached and exacted a blind faith,
2539 2, 2 | science, organs, and other preambles, is ordained for the service
2540 1, 2 | from seeing proceeds to precipitate into the concupiscence of
2541 1, 3 | ourselves to it. It is not a precipitation, under the laws of a tyrannous
2542 2, 4 | great river Nile which fall precipitously down to the plain.~MIN.
2543 1, 5 | while thine Apollo gives.~Predestined is the term of thy long
2544 1, Int | convent of the Order of Predicatori; he proposed going on to
2545 1, 4 | a bed of linen, he would prefer a sow to the most beautiful
2546 1, 4 | that one neither mar nor prejudice the law of the other, since
2547 1, 1 | what has been said and a prelude on what is to be said, and
2548 2, 1 | fruantur:~Quod petiere, premunt arte, faciuntque dolorem~
2549 2, 1 | then with more solemnity of preparation~The anger and the ire of
2550 1, Int | Bruno, however, made his preparations for departure, and sent
2551 1, 5 | place?~TANS. With three preparatives, which are noted by the
2552 1, Int | Frezzeria, and was soon busy preparing for the press a work called "
2553 2, 3 | discourse more at our ease presently. Let us go.~
2554 1, 2 | seek, accept, nourish, and preserve a love like that; but one
2555 1, 4 | divine providence, always preserves it with divine heat and
2556 2, 3(2)| of various deities which preside over the Cosmo-psychic Powers. -- ("
2557 2, 2 | builders and above them all presides the form of forms, 1 the
2558 1, 5 | salivas~Oris, et inspirant pressantes dentibus ora,~Necquiquam,
2559 2, 5 | lovers!~An impious Circe, who presumes to boast~Of having for her
2560 1, 2 | the same time fear, lest presuming in this they may be deprived
2561 2, 1 | careless boy.~Here I would not pretend to understand or determine
2562 1, Int | Mocenigo entered the chamber, pretending that he wished to speak
2563 2, 1 | down with anxious cares~Prevaileth not against the swollen
2564 1, 1 | condemn those which cannot be prevented, he shows himself as one
2565 1, Int | I have had no help from previous renderings. I have, for
2566 2, 1 | design, similar to those previously brought forward, and with
2567 2, 3(1)| Prima, per che tal impedimento
2568 1, 4 | sufficient for all things and primary, and whose word and pre-ordaining
2569 2, 1 | substantially, originally, primitively beautiful? How will it be
2570 2, Pre | the first light of the primordial Elo-him -- the A-dam,-male
2571 2, 1 | amantum,~Nec constat, quid primum oculis, manibusque fruantur:~
2572 2, 1 | important is the care of a prince over a republic, than that
2573 2, 3 | have studied in the~book De Principio ed uno, and I will suppose
2574 1, Int | Italy, and sanctioned a printer's company.~Bruno, attracted
2575 1, Int | university was closed, and the printing-house was not in operation. He
2576 2, 2 | Archimedes, of Euclid, of Priscian, of Donato, and others,
2577 2, 2 | liberty whatsoever.~CES. Prithee, let us read the sonnet,
2578 2, 2(1)| altro, e corre eterno per la privazione.~
2579 1, 1 | me such graces, honours, privileges, As are those laurel leaves
2580 2, 4(1)| who, at the end of their probation, are brought to see the
2581 1, Int | anticipates the doctrine, proclaimed later~by Goethe and by Darwin,
2582 2, 1 | spent, retain and for myself procure,~So much was given, is given,
2583 1, Int | sword and a hat; they also~procured some work for him in correcting
2584 2, 3 | the industrious intellect procures it, follows it, and seeks
2585 2, 2 | and the generating, the producer and produced. Thus you can
2586 1, 1 | intellect, permeating all and producing miraculous effects.~CIC.
2587 2, 1 | nemus, et silvae intonuere profandae.~ ~The eagle again, before
2588 1, Int | even though I would not profess the religion it implied,
2589 1, Int | Lutheran Church, because he professes a more pure and complete
2590 1, Int | from Mocenigo, full of fine professions of friendship and protection,
2591 1, Int | publishing; the most celebrated professors of that epoch were to be
2592 2, 1 | which is all in all does not proffer~or withhold except through
2593 1, 5 | one stands, one sits;~One proffers and one takes away;~One
2594 2, 2 | children and are generally profitable to no one, not even to themselves.~ ./.
2595 1, 4 | and those who dive more profoundly into it, but still more
2596 1, 4 | through participation, it progresses towards that which is really
2597 2, 2 | although they were always progressing onwards to where it was
2598 1, 4 | that the soul makes the two progressions of ascent and descent, by
2599 2, 1 | beginning retrogressively, and progressively towards its end and perfection,
2600 2, 1 | own brightness made him prominent and grand, and not the being
2601 1, 2 | without anything being promised or denied; therefore, he
2602 1, Int | artisans and scientists to promote industry, commerce, and
2603 1, 1 | studious, and circumspect, promoting a condition of valorous
2604 1, 4 | bat by its own light it is prompted to think of this: that it
2605 1, Int | perchance more terror in pronouncing this judgment than I do
2606 2, 1 | strength which cannot give proof of itself is dissipated;
2607 1, Int | his writings and to the propagation of his principles in Europe
2608 1, 5 | one and the other are very properly signified in the type of
2609 2, 4 | because the fire whose property it is to resolve all bodies
2610 2, 1 | adversity we may surely prophecy light and prosperity, and
2611 2, 1 | most pious, he made that prophetic lament to Asclepios, saying
2612 1, Int | Gli Eroici Farori" as a prophetical poem, we see that his sufferings
2613 2, 1 | were comforted by their prophets with the hope of liberty
2614 2, 1 | cannot be together. And thus proportionally in the love of the supernal
2615 1, 4 | conservation. This results proportionately in the act of understanding
2616 1, 4 | conceptions in his own way and proportions them to his capacity, so
2617 1, 5 | of these, the first is by proposing to conform himself to a
2618 2, 1 | surely prophecy light and prosperity, and when we are in a state
2619 2, 1 | The whale, ere he the dumb Protean herd~Hungry pursues, sends
2620 2, 1 | than a soul inclined to protect and favour the Muses, for
2621 2, 4(1)| basis for all the different Protestant sects.~
2622 1, 3 | rock, or like a shifting Proteus, changing now to this, now
2623 2, 1 | Tartaream intendit vocem, qua protinus omne~Contremuit nemus, et
2624 1, 5 | so much as stir, and its prototype keeps spirit, sense, and
2625 1, 5 | will I stay;~Here, where a prouder giant moves,~Who burns and
2626 2, 1 | worthily be so attached; provided that, through this material
2627 1, Int | his destitute condition proving a safeguard against,~the
2628 1, 3 | judgment, reason, and acts of prudence, and tossed by the discordant
2629 1, Int | concerned; he judged it prudent to leave Paris, and he travelled
2630 2, 5 | she replied: Oh curious prying minds,~Take this my other
2631 2, 4 | temerity. Whence says the Psalm: "Averte oculos tuos a me,
2632 1, Int | part, which may be called psychological, shows, by means of various
2633 1, Int | the faculty of teaching publicly in Paris, and he says "I
2634 1, Pre | in English, I decided to publish that portion of it which
2635 1, Int | begging for work from the publishers, Aldo and Grifi; but not
2636 1, Int | centre of printing and publishing; the most celebrated professors
2637 1, Int | exercises of the monks, the puerile gymnastics, and the adoration
2638 1, 5 | vapour, it is dissipated in puffs into the air. Here is signified
2639 1, 5 | legend about it which says, "Pulchriori detur."~CIC. The allusion
2640 1, 5 | Ex hominis vera facie, pulchroque colore~Nil datur in corpus
2641 1, 4(1)| Pulcini.
2642 1, 5 | it, he being the one who pulls the oars, and fills the
2643 1, 5 | And when thy light from pungent Scorpion darts~Transcendent
2644 1, 4 | beauteous beast that dost in punishment~Knit up the soul, spirit
2645 2, 3(1)| impedimento in atto non puo essere se non posti in atto
2646 2, 1 | Osculaque adfigunt, quia non est pura voluptas,~Et stimuli subsunt,
2647 1, 3 | if they be heroic and not purely animal, or what is called
2648 1, 3 | Beauty enkindles me, and pureness binds,~So that in flames
2649 2, 5 | received them with acts of purest~courtesy, one, the principal
2650 1, 5 | natural beauty seeks to purify itself, to heal itself,
2651 1, Int | penetrates everything. A purifying process guides them from
2652 1, 4 | weak, and, as it were, purposeless.~CIC. Thus a certain theologian,
2653 1, Int | short time and hide from his pursuers, he stayed his steps at
2654 2, 5 | of the mind,~Was one who pushed us to the only path,~And
2655 2, 1 | possessor. Fortunae au ulla putatis dona carcere dolis? For
2656 2, 2 | puella, ride,~Pelignus, puto, dixerat poeta;~Sed non
2657 2, 1 | contemplation, has been saved from putrefaction in the stomach and is duly
2658 2, 1 | Tartaream intendit vocem, qua protinus omne~Contremuit
2659 1, 4 | having something of the quadruped, and those of birds, and,
2660 1, Int | other -- namely, on the Quadruple Sphere and on the Immortality
2661 1, 5 | bibere in somnis sitiens cum quærit, et humor~Non datur, ardorem
2662 2, 4 | Hence it is said, "Qui quærunt, me, invenient me;" and
2663 2, 1 | Non dà, non fa, non ha qualunque stassi~Do l'orto, vita e
2664 1, 5(1)| Quando il sen d'oriente il giorno
2665 1, Int | probably only to initiate a quarrel with Bruno,~whom he intended
2666 1, 4 | complaining of the heart and quarrelling with the thoughts, she now
2667 2, 4 | lighted were, and ne'er were quenched;~But a more grievous destiny
2668 2, 4 | the beacon of the soul~He quenches. then as a foe he hides.~
2669 2, 5 | against them nor janitor who questioned them. They found themselves
2670 1, 5 | ludit amantis,~Nec satiare queunt spectando corpora coram,~
2671 1, 5 | corpora coram,~Nec manibus quicquam teneris abradere membris~
2672 1, Int | friends, and decided to quit Naples. He fled from the
2673 1, Int | thirty-one, years old when he quitted his country and crossed
2674 2, 1 | Let us see now, how this quiver and bow of Bros display
2675 2, 1 | oculis, manibusque fruantur:~Quod petiere, premunt arte, faciuntque
2676 2, 1 | instigant laedere id ipsum,~Quodcunque est, rabies, unde illa haec
2677 1, 5 | dentibus ora,~Necquiquam, quoniam nihil inde abradere possunt,~
2678 2, 1 | ardoris origo,~Restingui quoque posse ab eodem corpore flammam.~[
2679 2, 2 | decide about things Divine r Who does not see how much
2680 2, 4 | consolation seeks.~That spiteful, rabid, rancorous jealousy~Makes
2681 2, 1 | id ipsum,~Quodcunque est, rabies, unde illa haec germina
2682 1, 2 | From whom?~S. From him who racks me night and clay.~F. Has
2683 2, 1 | stars in the form of two radiant eyes, with the legend: Mors
2684 2, 1 | represented by those two radiating arrows upon a target around,
2685 2, 3(1)| visible." Darkness in its radical, metaphysical basis, is
2686 2, 5 | himself withdrew,~While rage to grief gave place;~To
2687 1, 5 | against which the wind is raging, and it is circumscribed
2688 2, 2 | of it. So that one goes rambling amongst the wild woods of
2689 2, 4 | seeks.~That spiteful, rabid, rancorous jealousy~Makes me go stumbling
2690 1, 5 | fear, ardour, jealousy, rancour, and other passions, which
2691 2, 5 | Nereias, maybe seen~'The rapid torrent from below ascend~
2692 1, 5 | this humid element, being rarefied and attenuated by virtue
2693 1, Int | hypocrisy, stupidity, and rascality, and exhibiting them in
2694 1, Int | out in English, or, at any rate, no translation of the "
2695 1, 2 | of my boldness.~F. Thou ravest.~S, How so?~F. In vain efforts.~
2696 1, 4 | presence of the same, and ravished out of himself by so much
2697 2, 5 | The ninth with the rebeek:~Re hidden is unveiled and,
2698 2, 3 | from above, as it is in re-active potentiality below, towards
2699 1, 4 | quite dead, but be again re-animated and made to aspire on high?
2700 2, 1 | repent, torment myself and re-assure,~For the loss, in suffering
2701 2, 1 | by heroes and by men~Be re-assured, so that I not despair,~
2702 1, 3 | their own nobility, they re-take their own divine form; as
2703 2, 1 | hope of liberty and the reacquisition of their country; when they
2704 1, Int | get occupation as press reader; but it was precisely at
2705 2, 1(2)| knowledge by hearsay, or by reading and study, nor yet by high
2706 1, 5 | desire than~pleasure in the realization. And this may have been
2707 1, 4 | composition of the body may be realized, that this machine dissolve
2708 1, Int | the affections, and man realizes the good and rises to the
2709 1, 5 | enough, oh memory!~These to reanimate in all their strength,~And
2710 2, 1 | ears of corn that may be reaped~In burning Apuleia, or sunbrowned
2711 2, 4 | beams on one in darkness reared,~Nurtured beneath the black
2712 2, 5 | The ninth with the rebeek:~Re hidden is unveiled and,
2713 2, 4(1)| Gone is heart's force, rebuked is mind's desire!~ When
2714 1, Int | Vesuvius. He tells how, in recalling those days -- the only peaceful
2715 1, 2 | in this, that the thing recedes from its nature, the perfection
2716 2, Pre | will meet with a favourable reception.~When I first began this
2717 2, 4 | sure~Of pure and favourable receptions.~Amongst you all, the latent
2718 2, 3 | things; so that it is in receptive potentiality from above,
2719 1, 4 | according to the manner of the recipient.~TANS. And does he hunt
2720 2, 1(1)| Astronomers generally choose to reckon by the fixed and intellectual
2721 2, 1(1)| of the zodiacal circle, reckoning from the equinoctial point
2722 1, 3 | this detested bliss,~And I reclaim me from the cloying hurt.~
2723 2, 3 | LIBERIO. LAODONIO.~LIB. Reclining in the shade of a cypress-tree,
2724 1, 3 | and brought to themselves, recognizing its principle and genius,
2725 2, 3 | LAO. Repeat, if you eau recollect, the reasons and the words.~
2726 1, Int | to the Church, and to be reconciled to the Pope; but Bruno,
2727 1, Int | he initiates the work of reconstruction, giving colour to his thought
2728 1, Int | itself atom to atom, it reconstructs for itself a new body. The
2729 1, 5 | Thus the soul striving to recover its natural beauty seeks
2730 2, 5 | happiness; one, the having recovered the light they had lost,
2731 2, 1 | intelligence and splendour of rectitude, while others incite and
2732 2, 1 | Pastorale canit signum, cornuque recurvo~Tartaream intendit vocem,
2733 1, Int | practice of justice, the true redemption the liberation of the soul
2734 1, 1 | beginnings and one opposite he reduces to one beginning and one
2735 2, 1 | certain~letters where he refers to the words of Epicurus
2736 1, Int | conspicuous for culture and refinement, and its inhabitants were
2737 2, 1 | adamantine subject does not reflect from its surface, the impression
2738 2, 4 | joined in one,~And thou, reflecting crystal, which from without~
2739 2, 4 | vision through analogies, reflections and enigmas, because we
2740 2, 4 | difficulty which proceeds from reflective vision, but to that which
2741 1, 5 | sun, because she always reflects his rays over at least the
2742 2, 4 | cave. whence, not through reflexion, but through immediate conversion
2743 2, 1 | inter amorem,~Blandaque refraenat morsus admixta voluptas;~
2744 1, 3 | same vice; and I will not refrain from repeating that which
2745 1, Int | Martire Veimigli, and other refugees, who welcomed him with affection,
2746 1, 4 | others? Ought not Nature to refuse to give you the other good,
2747 2, 1 | and false, no author more regal and faithful, and, in fine,
2748 1, Int | born in 1548." He always regarded Nola with patriotic pride,
2749 1, 5 | with regard to the various regions of the earth he is for each
2750 1, 3 | internal law, written and registered by the destined decree,
2751 1, 3 | loving, nevertheless he regrets it, and shows his regret
2752 2, 1 | proceeds from science and is regulated by the art of~ ./. considering
2753 1, 5 | felicity, in such wise that Regulus did not feel the chest,
2754 1, Int | Turin. In Turin at that time reigned the great Duke Emanuele
2755 2, 4 | the land where darkness reigns!~Wherefore being dead, speak
2756 1, 5 | And with imperious sov'reignty they rule~And govern each
2757 2, 1 | through assimilation or rejection by oneself. 1~VII.~MAR.
2758 1, 4 | bands be loosened.~CIC. Now relate that which follows.~TANS.:~
2759 1, 5 | made to mean aspiring? What relation has desire with the winds?~
2760 1, Int | the adoration of so-called relics. His character was frank
2761 1, 3 | because as the Pythagoreans remark, "The soul moves and turns
2762 1, Int | inhabitants were in all times remarkable for their courteous manners,
2763 2, 1 | who is wise unto himself, remembering what Democritus says: "Unus
2764 1, 4 | one work or study, becomes remiss and careless in others.~
2765 1, 5 | towards burning Cancer he remounts.~And equal to this heat,
2766 2, 1 | not clear itself by the removal of the metaphors and enigmas.
2767 1, Int | subsistence by the small remuneration he received; but this modest
2768 1, Int | the choice spirits of the Renaissance. It may also be asserted
2769 1, Int | had no help from previous renderings. I have, for the most part,
2770 1, 5 | the form of tearful cries rends the bosom, and some other
2771 2, 2 | clear mind, oh, blessed repast, fit to spread before lions,
2772 1, 3 | I will not refrain from repeating that which I know by experience,
2773 1, Int | Each system is attracted, repelled, and moved by an infinite,
2774 2, 1 | from this strife,~If one repels, the other draws me on.~
2775 2, 1 | and in the future,~I do repent, torment myself and re-assure,~
2776 1, 5 | remorse, determination, repentance, and other scourges, which
2777 2, 4 | other, if there is one who replaces it or scatters it through
2778 1, 5 | as at the end, where it reposes, but as in the middle, where
2779 1, Int | struggle to reproduce and represent upon earth some of that
2780 2, 1(1)| all Opinions, Spiritual Representations and Creations, be followed
2781 2, 3 | looking-glass, and of a representer; when they are moved however,
2782 2, 2(2)| line of the Triangle -- representing the first triad that emanates
2783 2, 4 | and with too much force, repressed and restrained by a contrary
2784 1, 4 | domesticity,~And with strong repression guard thy sight,~That strangers
2785 2, 1 | care of a prince over a republic, than that of a rustic over
2786 2, 2 | certain deserts and uncultured republics. Do you not see what damage
2787 1, Int | free-thinkers, and politicians, who repudiated every positive religion
2788 1, 5 | every other beauty and the repudiation of every other good whatsoever.
2789 1, Int | to leave Italy, as it was repugnant to his disposition to live
2790 2, 1 | what is that, of which he requests that it consider those thoughts
2791 2, 4 | excelsum." So that it does not require a useless lapse of time,
2792 1, 5 | the figure, he shows the resemblance~between the enthusiast and
2793 1, 2 | repugnance or accepted with reserve; for he thinks the evil
2794 1, Int | ardour. For in this centre, resides the sun of suns, the unity
2795 1, 5 | our evil fate -- all hope resign.~CIC. Let us go, and by
2796 1, Int | so-called Christian perfections (resignation, devotion, and ignorance),
2797 2, 1(1)| the heart is unable to resist him. -- ("Spiritual Torrents.") ~
2798 2, 3(1)| hindrance; and the greater the resistance, the more its activity would
2799 1, 5 | and dies more gaily, more resolutely, and more courageously than
2800 2, 1 | trumpets forth his roar, which resounds through the whole forest,
2801 1, 2 | dolent gaudentque, nec~Respiciunt, clausæ tenebris, e carcere
2802 2, 3 | Tell me, how did the eyes respond to the heart?~58.~First
2803 1, Int | mechanic he had found no resting-place -- nowhere to lay his head,
2804 2, 1 | unde est ardoris origo,~Restingui quoque posse ab eodem corpore
2805 1, 5 | that may avail~Peace to restore; murderous yet innocent;~
2806 1, 4 | no more the hand that did restrain,~And is I one forth not
2807 2, 4 | much force, repressed and restrained by a contrary humour, so
2808 1, 2 | him thither where reason restrains, and vice versâ. This same
2809 1, 4 | suitable that the infinite be restricted, nor give itself definitely,
2810 1, Int | what he was; some tumult resulted from this free speaking
2811 2, 3(1)| wood or of straw, it would resume its former activity, and
2812 1, Int | social practice. Bruno having resuscitated these doctrines, stamps
2813 2, 4(1)| fear~ Mingles with joy! Retake,~ Dear Lord! for pity's
2814 2, 1 | what manner it comes to be retarded by the weight of a stone
2815 1, Int | says, probably intended to retouch the work before printing.~
2816 2, 4 | there is no need for me to retract, because I have never said
2817 2, 1 | impetus towards its beginning retrogressively, and progressively towards
2818 1, Int | Nature and with God.~Bruno returned to Paris in 1585, being
2819 1, Int | not, and have not dared to reveal the Truth in its purity
2820 2, 1 | is earth to earth itself reverts,~The rivers from the sea
2821 2, Pre | to the writers who have reviewed his books, whether he has
2822 1, Int | had he the opportunity of revising what he had written down.
2823 1, 5 | practised, expert, and ready -- revolt against the foreign adversary,
2824 1, Int | of social cataclysms and revolutions humanity has one guiding
2825 2, 5 | of the proposition, nor rhyme to the completion of the
2826 2, 5 | arrogance is thine.~What to thy riches have been added now,~Oh
2827 1, Int | are, superior through the richness of the same. Thus we see
2828 1, 3 | the intellectual sun, and ridding itself of the rust of human
2829 1, Int | colours, he lashes them with ridicule. In the "Umbrae Idearum"
2830 1, 3 | those things, justly and rightfully ordained, all agree in one.
2831 1, 4 | TANS. Thou understandest rightly. From this ~thou oughtest
2832 1, Int | him into dispute with the rigid Calvinists of that city,
2833 2, 1 | scourges, tires; -- (altrui rigor mi lassa)~Love doth exalt
2834 1, 5 | can she know, alas!~The rigorous ardour of my flames.~40.~
2835 1, 5 | Melting am I.~I like thy rigours, thee my ardour pleases;~
2836 2, 3(1)| in atto tali oltraggiosi ripari. Does this mean that the
2837 1, 2 | of success than there is risk of forfeiting that favour,
2838 1, 3(1)| Facilmente ritorna al sesso.
2839 1, 4 | spirit's rival more than rivalled is~If, far from sin, it
2840 2, 5 | those who at first were rivals for your beauty, swore not
2841 2, 4 | the cataracts of the great river Nile which fall precipitously
2842 1, Int | distance. from Savona, on the Riviera: this town, nestled in a
2843 2, 1 | hunt trumpets forth his roar, which resounds through
2844 2, 1 | prey.~And the fierce lion roaring from his lair~Spreads horror
2845 2, 1 | that howls, the lion that roars and the dog that barks (
2846 2, 3 | feel?~Why saturated and not roasted ye,~If not of water but
2847 2, 1 | move him and which would rob him of the sight of the
2848 1, Int | and so I got a white cloth robe, and I put on the hood which
2849 1, Int | the cloth of his monkish robes, and his new friends presented
2850 1, 5 | circumscribed by the legend, "ut robori robur," and here is the
2851 1, 2 | so much purity (omestà) robs me of my boldness.~F. Thou
2852 1, 5 | by the legend, "ut robori robur," and here is the tablet,
2853 1, 1 | weak, and the other of the robust. One thing is certain, that
2854 2, 5 | the high, storm-beaten rocks, the murmur of the sea waves
2855 2, 3 | it conceded, Lest it go rolling aimlessly adown.~The strength
2856 2, 1 | plight.~See there the traitor rolls his fatal waves,~The prow
2857 1, Int | letters. From the time of the Romans to that of the Barbarians
2858 2, 1 | Accolet, imperiumque pater romanus habebit.~MAR. I remember
2859 2, 5 | can be found~Beneath the roof of heaven so dowered as
2860 1, 1 | terminate in one base or root; and, spiritually, from
2861 2, 1 | floating on the waves; its ropes are attached to the shore
2862 2, 2 | lengthen the beard, they rot, and in these things they
2863 1, 5 | nerves, it alarms and puts to rout the enemy.~CIC. In what
2864 1, Int | automatically the daily vulgar routine of~the convent; the pure
2865 2, 5 | they put themselves, in a row.~73.~The first played the
2866 2, 1 | the magicians, satraps and royalties upon whom depended his title
2867 1, 5 | to the fairest give the ruddy sphere.~Compared with Venus,
2868 1, Int | of mathematics, and the rudiments of the mnemonic art; but
2869 1, 4 | Wherefore these broken ruined powers, if not~To make me
2870 2, 4 | which through the eyes rushed to the heart,~And formed
2871 2, 2 | infinite velocity; the present rushes by with the same swiftness
2872 2, 1 | himself by an indissoluble sacrament to divine things, in such
2873 1, 3 | the ass which carries the sacraments; the second are as a sacred
2874 2, 1 | singers, so that usually, the sacrificant, the victim and the sanctified
2875 1, Int | eclipses the poet. The first sacrifices thought to form; the second
2876 1, Int | things; the world itself is a sacrum animal. Nothing is lost,
2877 2, 1 | that it will no further sadden by privation, for it can
2878 1, 4 | declared by the Pythagoreans, Saduchimi and others, and by implication,
2879 2, 1 | description of the fury-hunter.~At saeva e speculis tempus dea nacta,
2880 1, Int | destitute condition proving a safeguard against,~the bands of brigands
2881 2, 1 | fires.~Vainly I strive some safer shores to reach,~Vainly
2882 1, 4 | from sin, it unassailed may sail,~If thither tending, it
2883 1, Int | noble enterprises and the saintly heroism of Olympus and of
2884 1, 1 | on thy wreath~Composed of salad, sausage, and the pepper-caster.~
2885 1, Int | Tempo," hoping that the sale of it would bring a little
2886 1, 5 | avide corpus, iunguntque salivas~Oris, et inspirant pressantes
2887 2, 1 | while he is being praised, saluted, hailed, and presented.
2888 1, 3 | one agrees with the many, sameness with variety, movement with
2889 2, 1 | calls it furtive waters. Samuel named it the whisper of
2890 1, Int | compositors of Italy, and sanctioned a printer's company.~Bruno,
2891 2, 1 | Apennines or lose oneself in the sandy plains, because the road
2892 2, 3 | some certainly and full of sap. Listen.~61.~Second response
2893 2, 2 | and vain.~MAR.~Ride, si sapis, o puella, ride,~Pelignus,
2894 1, 5 | simulacris ludit amantis,~Nec satiare queunt spectando corpora
2895 2, 3 | way satiated.~LAO. Esuries satiata, satietas esuriens.~LIB.
2896 2, 3 | satiated.~LAO. Esuries satiata, satietas esuriens.~LIB. Precisely
2897 2, 1 | Haec tibi, non multis! Satis enim magnum alter alteri
2898 2, 1 | in the midst of all the satisfactions. For nothing is produced
2899 2, 1 | than all the magicians, satraps and royalties upon whom
2900 2, 3 | contrary effects you feel?~Why saturated and not roasted ye,~If not
2901 1, 3 | it is deceptive, like the sauce that old Saturn gets when
2902 1, 1 | wreath~Composed of salad, sausage, and the pepper-caster.~
2903 1, 2 | a subject more savage or savagely; so that the difference
2904 2, 1 | contemplation, has been saved from putrefaction in the
2905 2, 1 | his efficiency ruins or saves the ship; but the Divine
2906 2, 2 | all desire or intention of saving his life, lost it while
2907 1, Int | my mother was Francesca Savolini; and my father was a soldier.
2908 2, 2 | be held to be of little savour and of small account. But
2909 2, 1 | Aeneae Capitoli immobile saxum~Accolet, imperiumque pater
2910 1, 5 | Anaxagoras the mortar, Scævola the fire, Cocles the abyss,
2911 1, Int | teaching and ever the same scanty welcome was accorded to
2912 1, Int | handful of the ashes and scattered them in the wind. A month
2913 1, 1 | the field of the Muses and scattering the seed of his thoughts
2914 1, Int | warrior, artist, mechanic, and scholar. Intrepid on the field of
2915 1, Int | much attention amongst the scholars of the Sorbonne, who went
2916 1, Int | Platonic or the Peripatetic~school; he was not exclusive either
2917 1, 1 | CIC. There are certain schoolmen who barely allow Homer to
2918 1, Int | house and in the public schools. Of a sad disposition, and
2919 1, Int | Geistes eigneten sich die Schriften des Jordanus Brunous von
2920 1, Int | but connects these with scientific observations and social
2921 2, Pre | A-dam,-male and female, or, (scientifically) Electricity and Life. Its
2922 1, Int | sides of Italy,~artisans and scientists to promote industry, commerce,
2923 2, 3 | sense appears, who reason scorns.~My flame could never wing
2924 1, 5 | namely, Taurus, Leo, Scorpio, and Aquarius, to signify
2925 1, 5 | when thy light from pungent Scorpion darts~Transcendent is the
2926 2, 1 | the cries and noise and screams of those who may be heard. 1~
2927 1, 6 | And whatsoe'er is mine of scribbling faculty,~I humbly place
2928 1, Int | the Pope, and demanded two scudi in payment for having degraded
2929 2, 1 | must not linger between Scylla and Charybdis, penetrate
2930 2, 1 | tooth of the age and the scythe of Saturn in order to be
2931 2, 3(1)| impedimento in atto non puo essere se non posti in atto tali oltraggiosi
2932 2, 5 | Thou hast," said the sea-god, "in thy command,~The flaming
2933 2, 4 | else can be imprinted and sealed. Therefore, that form being
2934 2, 1 | explained in the book of thirty seals, wherein are produced so
2935 2, 3 | philosophy, and I leave it to be searched for, meditated upon and
2936 2, 5 | of the locality and the season combined, made them feel
2937 2, 5 | all lower things are null,~Seasoning with hope the high thought
2938 2, 1 | towards the objects of the secondary and material potencies.
2939 1, 5 | fire which first warms, secondly kindles, thirdly burns,
2940 1, 5 | it cannot be divided into seconds? Perhaps he would say that
2941 2, 1 | and not the being grand secretary and councillor of Augustus.
2942 1, Int | and instruct him in the secrets of science. Bruno was beginning
2943 1, 2 | dissidentem habet: unde nec secum ipse convenire potest, neque
2944 2, 1 | one who has laboured to secure the fruits of love, such
2945 1, Int | grammar to children, and thus secured the means. of subsistence
2946 1, 3 | dissonance as corporeal~through seditions, destructions, and plagues,
2947 1, Int | Humanity, deceived by a seductive form, adored the veil, but
2948 | seeming
2949 1, Int | the press a work called "Segni del Tempo," hoping that
2950 1, Int | and this alternation from segregation to aggregation, which we
2951 1, Int | he wrote hurriedly and seldom or ever had he the opportunity
2952 2, 2(2)| potentiality for creation, or self-consciousness, in a pure Spirit on this
2953 1, Int | about that time; but his self-imposed mission allowed him no rest;
2954 2, 4 | truth, expressed in the selfsame book, serves with the same
2955 1, 5 | shows itself as a shadow, a semblance, and a vestige, and sometimes
2956 2, 2(1)| Atteso che sempre è altro ed altro, e corre
2957 1, 5(1)| Quando il sen d'oriente il giorno sgombra.~
2958 2, 1 | habebit.~MAR. I remember what Seneca says in certain~letters
2959 1, 3 | affection for every other thing senseful as well as intellectual,
2960 1, 4 | figure or the conception, sensibly or intelligently represented,
2961 1, 5 | thirst, nor fatigue, nor sensuality. From this may be understood
2962 1, 4 | sensuous love, from seeing sensuously. Now this seeing has two
2963 2, 2 | metaphysics, judging and sentencing those which they had never
2964 1, 4 | this, because he vainly separates from her, ever more and
2965 2, 3 | signify the. difficulty of separating the thing wished for from
2966 1, 2 | listen to another sonnet, as sequel to what has been said:~10.~
2967 2, 1 | nearly all mortals who are seriously affected in any way. We
2968 1, 5 | alio convertere mentem,~Nec servare sibi curam certumque dolorem:~
2969 1, 4 | things in those worlds, serving its own life eternally;
2970 1, 3 | binds,~So that in flames and servitude I take delight,~Liberty
2971 1, 3(1)| Facilmente ritorna al sesso.
2972 1, Int | attended his lectures; in settling the basis of a new and rational
2973 2, 3 | Egypt inundates,~Running its sevenfold course unto the sea.~Nature
2974 1, 4 | thoughts of mine,~Ye long to sever the maternal ties~Of the
2975 2, 4 | Dialogue.~Interlocutors:~SEVERINO. MINUTOLO.~SEV. You will
2976 2, 1 | nunquam memori vos eximet sevo,~Dum domus Aeneae Capitoli
2977 1, Int | tal, ch'io m'ardo e non mi sfaccio."~EROICI FURORI.~ ~
2978 2, 1 | spirit which says: Adorate sgabellum pedum eius. And in another
2979 1, 5(1)| sen d'oriente il giorno sgombra.~
2980 1, Int | which kept him free of the shackles of the sects, did he obtain
2981 2, 1 | he will say, if beauty so shadowy, so dim, so fugitive, painted
2982 1, Int | her; the other tried to shake her; to recall her to life
2983 1, Int | and, perchance, also of Shakespeare himself, who was in London
2984 2, 1 | and the other, the idol of shame and infamy, knows not that
2985 2, 4(1)| pity's sake,~Thine earthly shape, which earthly eyes may
2986 1, 3 | the breath of intention, sharpen their senses, and in the
2987 1, 2 | compassion of himself he sheds tears from his eyes; dying
2988 2, Pre | parallel is drawn between Shelley and Bruno.~I will close
2989 2, 1 | through life, to death in sheltered home.~Non dà, non fa, non
2990 2, 3 | to the sea if the heart shelters them with equal tenacity.
2991 2, 5 | Which, let me tell you, shineth not so bright,~As she who
2992 1, 2 | his soul is discordant, he shivers in his frozen hopes and
2993 1, 5 | fixed there, where the shock of the tempest is not felt.~
2994 1, 5 | thing to be desired, to bear shocks in order to prove that you
2995 1, Int | the funeral pile. Brightly shone the sun, and the~flames
2996 2, 1 | eyelids closed, lest thou shouldst see him come.~If thee no
2997 2, 5 | to us it seems~As if the shrewd wild beast,~With false and
2998 2, 1 | Through vows I offer to the shrine of Fame?~And if another
2999 2, 2 | the other hand, an old man shrivelled, weak, of failing strength,
3000 2, 4 | words; as one sees more by shutting the eyes O the species represented,
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