Memoirs of Margaret Fuller Ossoli, Volume 1Phillips, Sampson, 1852 - 347 pages I. Youth: autobiography. Cambridge, by J. F. Clarke. Groton and Providence: letters and journals. Concord, by R. W. Emerson. Boston, by R. W. Emerson.--II. Jamaica Plain, by W. H. Channing. New York: Journals, letters, &c. Europe: Letters. Homeward, by W. H. Channing. |
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Page 5
... soul I purposed her , that should with even powers The rock , the spindle , and the shears control Of Destiny , and spin her own free hours . BEN JONSON . Però che ogni diletto nostro e doglia Sta in sì e no saper , voler , potere ...
... soul I purposed her , that should with even powers The rock , the spindle , and the shears control Of Destiny , and spin her own free hours . BEN JONSON . Però che ogni diletto nostro e doglia Sta in sì e no saper , voler , potere ...
Page 12
... soul , to regard life here as the prophetic entrance to ' immortality , to develop his spirit to perfection , mo- ' tives like these had never been suggested to him , either by fellow - beings or by outward circumstances . The ' result ...
... soul , to regard life here as the prophetic entrance to ' immortality , to develop his spirit to perfection , mo- ' tives like these had never been suggested to him , either by fellow - beings or by outward circumstances . The ' result ...
Page 40
... from habits ' of reading or reverie to feel the fiery temper of the ' soul , and to learn that it must have vent , that it would ' not be pacified by shadows , neither meet without con- ' suming what lay around it . I avoided the 40 YOUTH .
... from habits ' of reading or reverie to feel the fiery temper of the ' soul , and to learn that it must have vent , that it would ' not be pacified by shadows , neither meet without con- ' suming what lay around it . I avoided the 40 YOUTH .
Page 50
... soul lay revealed to her eye . How ' black , how stained , and sad ! Strange , strange , ' that she had not seen before the baseness and cruelty ' of falsehood , the loveliness of truth ! Now , amid the ' wreck , uprose the moral nature ...
... soul lay revealed to her eye . How ' black , how stained , and sad ! Strange , strange , ' that she had not seen before the baseness and cruelty ' of falsehood , the loveliness of truth ! Now , amid the ' wreck , uprose the moral nature ...
Page 54
... soul . We may now hope more strongly for the ' liberties of unchained Europe ; we look in anxious sus- pense for the issue of the struggle of Greece , the result ' of which seems to depend on the new autocrat . I have ' lately been ...
... soul . We may now hope more strongly for the ' liberties of unchained Europe ; we look in anxious sus- pense for the issue of the struggle of Greece , the result ' of which seems to depend on the new autocrat . I have ' lately been ...
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acquaintance admire beauty believe Boston Cambridge character child companion conversation course dæmon dear deep divine earnest Ennius expression eyes faith fancy father feel felt flowers friends friendship gave genius George Ripley George Sand girls give Goethe grace Groton Guercino happy Harriet Martineau heart heaven Hermann and Dorothea hope human intellectual intercourse interest journal knew lady letters light live look Madame De Stael Madame Recamier Margaret Margaret Fuller Mariana meet mind Miss Molière mother nature never night noble Novalis pain passed passion passionate emotions perhaps persons Petrarch Plato poet poetic poetry Raphael remember rience seemed sense sentiment sometimes soul speak spirit sweet sympathy talent talk taste tell thee things thou thought tion tone true truth wish woman words write young youth