Critical and Miscellaneous Essays, àÅèÁ·Õè 3

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˹éÒ 326 - The true past departs not, nothing that was worthy in the past departs ; no truth or goodness realized by man ever dies, or can die ; but is all still here, and, recognized or not, lives and works through endless changes.
˹éÒ 73 - And were this world all devils o'er, And watching to devour us, We lay it not to heart so sore; Not they can overpower us. And let the prince of ill Look grim as e'er he will, He harms us not a whit; For why his doom is writ; A word shall quickly slay him.
˹éÒ 72 - With force of arms we nothing can, full soon were we downridden; but for us fights the proper Man, whom God himself hath bidden. Ask ye, who is this same? Christ Jesus is his name, the Lord Sabaoth's Son, he and no other one shall conquer in the battle.
˹éÒ 71 - by proofs of Scripture, or else by plain just arguments: I cannot recant otherwise. For it is neither safe nor prudent to do aught against conscience. Here stand I ; I can do no other: God assist me!
˹éÒ 10 - I forget that inward occurrence, till now narrated to no mortal, wherein I witnessed the birth of my Self-consciousness, of which I can still give the place and time. One forenoon, I was standing, a very young child, in the outer door, and looking leftward at the stack of the fuel-wood,—when all at once the internal vision, " I am a ME (ich bin ein Ich...
˹éÒ 343 - Goethe's life too, if we examine it, is well represented in that emblem of a solar Day. Beautifully rose our summer sun, gorgeous in the red fervid east, scattering the spectres and sickly damps (of both of which there were enough to scatter) ; strong, benignant in his noonday clearness, walking triumphant through the upper realms; and now, mark also how he sets ! ' So stirbt ein Held ; anbetungsvoll, So dies a hero; to be worshipped...
˹éÒ 317 - ... for the service of man : yet man remains unserved. He has subdued this Planet, his habitation and inheritance; yet reaps no profit from the victory. Sad to look upon : in the highest stage of civilisation, ninetenths of mankind have to struggle in the lowest battle of savage or even animal man, the battle against Famine.
˹éÒ 349 - Books, is to be said of these: there is in them a New Time, the prophecy and beginning of a New Time. The corner-stone of a new social edifice for mankind...
˹éÒ 315 - Where two or three are gathered together' in the name of the Highest, then first does the Highest, as it is written, ' appear among them to bless them ;' then first does an Altar and act of united Worship open a way from Earth to Heaven ; whereon, were it but a simple...
˹éÒ 344 - Seer ; for he sees into this greatest of secrets, ' the open, secret;' hidden things become clear ; how the Future (both resting on Eternity) is but another phasis of the Present : thereby are his words in very truth prophetic; what he has spoken shall be done.

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