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" But besides this, they know how often its seriousness has put to shame their trifling, its magnanimity their faint-heartedness, its living energy their indolence, its stern and sad grandeur rebuked low thoughts, its thrilling tenderness overcome sullenness... "
Essays and Reviews - Page 113
by Richard William Church - 1854 - 570 pages
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The Commedia and Canzoniere of Dante Alighieri, Volume 2

Dante Alighieri - 1887 - 586 pages
...their indolence, its stern and sad grandeur rebuked low thoughts, its thrilling tenderness overcome sullenness and assuaged distress, its strong faith...imparted the sense of harmony to the view of clashing truth. They know how often they have found in times of trouble, if not light, at least that deep sense...
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Dante, and Other Essays

Richard William Church - 1888 - 282 pages
...indolence, its stern and sad grandeur rebuked low thoughts, its thrilling tenderness overcome sullenncss and assuaged distress, its strong faith quelled despair...soothed perplexity, its vast grasp imparted the sense of barmony to the view of clashing truths. They know how often they have found, in times of trouble, if...
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Dante and the English Poets from Chaucer to Tennyson

Oscar Kuhns - 1904 - 302 pages
...Essay on Dante. Similar language is used by Dean Church at the close of his admirable essay on Dante: "They know how often they have found, in times of...unseen, which is more than light can always give." Dante was profound; his father says of him: "No poet was so congenial to the character of his own reflective...
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The Thirteenth, Greatest of Centuries

James Joseph Walsh - 1907 - 500 pages
...and soothed perplexity, its vast grasp imparted the sense of harmony to the view of clashing truth. They know how often they have found in times of trouble,...which it has suggested to them of the judgments and love of God." As might have been expected from the fact of Dante's English popularity paralleling the...
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The Thirteenth, Greatest of Centuries

James Joseph Walsh - 1907 - 660 pages
...their indolence, its stern and sad grandeur rebuked low thoughts, its thrilling tenderness overcome sullenness and assuaged distress, its strong faith...imparted the sense of harmony to the view of clashing truth. They know how often they have found in times of trouble, if not light, at least that deep sense...
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The Thirteenth, Greatest of Centuries

James Joseph Walsh - 1907 - 650 pages
...their indolence, its stern and sad grandeur rebuked low thoughts, its thrilKng tenderness overcome sullenness and assuaged distress, its strong faith...grasp imparted the sense of harmony to the view of TVi«>v knnw Viow nftpn thpv havp fniinH in ways give — in the view which it has suggested to them...
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Dean Church

Daniel Conner Lathbury - 1912 - 228 pages
...their indolence, its stern and sad grandeur rebuked low thoughts, its thrilling tenderness overcome sullenness and assuaged distress, its strong faith...clashing truths. They know how often they have found in t1mes of trouble, if not light, at least that deep sense of reality, permanent though unseen, which...
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A One-sided Autobiography: Containing the Story of My Intellectual Life

Oscar Kuhns - 1913 - 248 pages
...energy, my indolence; its stern and sad grandeur rebuked low thoughts, its thrilling tenderness overcome sullenness and assuaged distress, its strong faith...sense of harmony to the view of clashing truths." I too have found in time of trouble, "if not light, at least the deep sense of reality, permanent though...
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A One-sided Autobiography: Containing the Story of My Intellectual Life

Oscar Kuhns - 1913 - 244 pages
...harmony to the view of clashing truths." I too have found in time of trouble, "if not light, at least the deep sense of reality, permanent though unseen, which...in the view which it has suggested to them of the judgment and the love of God." But, above all, I owe to Dante a glimpse into his own lofty view of...
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The Thirteenth, Greatest of Centuries

James Joseph Walsh - 1924 - 648 pages
...and soothed perplexity. its vast grasp imparted the sense of harmony to the view of clashing truth. They know how often they have found in times of trouble, if not light, at least that""deep sense of reality, permanent though unseen, which is mor& than light can always give —...
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