Coleridge, Samuel Taylor to Combustion
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, n (36)
Nat 1.43 23
A Gothic church, said Coleridge, is a petrified religion.
OS 2.287 8
The great distinction...between philosophers like Spinoza, Kant
and Coleridge, and philosophers like Locke, Paley, Mackintosh and
Stewart...is that one class speak from within...and the other class from
without...
Int 2.343 24
A new doctrine seems at first a subversion of all our opinions,
tastes, and manner of living. Such has Swedenborg...such has Coleridge...
seemed to many young men in this country.
PPh 4.39 20
...every brisk young man who says in succession fine things to
each reluctant generation,--Boethius...Coleridge,--is some reader of Plato...
ShP 4.204 17
Coleridge and Goethe are the only critics who have expressed
our convictions [about Shakespeare] with any adequate fidelity...
ET1 5.4 4
...my narrow and desultory reading had inspired the wish to see
the faces of three or four writers,--Coleridge, Wordsworth, Landor,
DeQuincey...
ET1 5.10 8
From London...I went to Highgate, and wrote a note to Mr.
Coleridge...
ET1 5.10 10
From London...I went to Highgate, and wrote a note to Mr.
Coleridge, requesting leave to pay my respects to him. It was near noon. Mr
Coleridge sent a verbal message that he was in bed, but if I would call after
one o'clock he would see me.
ET1 5.11 27
He (Coleridge) knew all about Unitarianism perfectly well...
ET1 5.21 28
Carlyle [Wordsworth] said wrote most obscurely. He was
clever and deep, but he defied the sympathies of every body. Even Mr.
Coleridge wrote more clearly...
ET1 5.22 1
...[Wordsworth] had always wished Coleridge would write
more to be understood.
ET9 5.146 4
Mr. Coleridge is said to have given public thanks to God...that
he had defended him from being able to utter a single sentence in the
French language.
ET14 5.248 22
Coleridge...is one of those who save England from the
reproach of no longer possessing the capacity to appreciate what rarest wit
the island has yielded.
ET14 5.249 9
...Coleridge narrowed his mind in the attempt to reconcile the
Gothic rule and dogma of the Anglican Church, with eternal ideas.
ET14 5.249 12
But for Coleridge...one would say that in Germany and in
America is the best mind in England rightly respected.
ET17 5.295 4
[The Edinburgh Review] had...changed the tone of its literary
criticism from the time when a certain letter was written to the editor by
Coleridge.
SS 7.14 23
Put Stubbs and Coleridge, Quintilian and Aunt Miriam, into
pairs, and you make them all wretched.
Art2 7.47 9
Even Shakspeare...we think indebted to Goethe and to
Coleridge for the wisdom they detect in his Hamlet and Antony.
DL 7.103 24
Infancy, said Coleridge, presents body and spirit in unity...
Clbs 7.237 10
...the Table-Talk of Coleridge is one of the best remains of
his genius.
Cour 7.262 1
Coleridge has preserved an anecdote of an officer in the
British Navy...
PI 8.55 24
Keats disclosed by certain lines in his Hyperion this inward
skill; and Coleridge showed at least his love and appetency for it.
SA 8.93 20
Coleridge esteems cultivated women as the depositaries and
guardians of English undefiled;...
QO 8.190 26
...we value in Coleridge his excellent knowledge and
quotations perhaps as much, possibly more, than his original suggestions.
MoL 10.249 4
Coleridge traces three silent revolutions...
LLNE 10.342 22
...there was no concert, and only here and there two or
three men or women who read and wrote, each alone, with unusual
vivacity. Perhaps they only agreed in having fallen upon Coleridge and
Wordsworth...with pleasure and sympathy.
MMEm 10.402 15
[Mary Moody Emerson's] early reading was Milton,
Young, Akenside, Samuel Clarke, Jonathan Edwards, and always the Bible.
Later...Stewart, Coleridge, Cousin...
Wom 11.405 19
...Coleridge was wont to apply to a lady for her judgment
in questions of taste...
II 12.70 12
...Goethe, Fourier, Schelling, Coleridge, they all begin...
Bost 12.197 25
In the midst of [New England's] laborious and economical
and rude and awkward population...you shall not unfrequently meet that
refinement...which...gave a hospitality in this country to the spirit of
Coleridge and Wordsworth...before yet their genius had found a hearty
welcome in Great Britain.
MLit 12.318 24
This new love of the vast, always native in Germany...
appeared in England in Coleridge, Wordsworth, Byron...and finds a most
genial climate in the American mind.
MLit 12.319 13
Nothing certifies the prevalence of this [subjective] taste in
the people more than the circulation of the poems...of Coleridge, Shelley
and Keats.
WSL 12.338 26
[Landor's] partialities and dislikes...often whimsical and
amusing; yet they are quite sincere and, like those of Johnson and
Coleridge, are easily separable from the man.
WSL 12.346 21
[Landor] is a man full of thoughts, but not, like Coleridge,
a man of ideas.
WSL 12.346 24
Only from a mind conversant with the First Philosophy can
definitions be expected. Coleridge has contributed many valuable ones to
modern literature.
EurB 12.366 27
Coleridge excellently said of poetry, that poetry must first
be good sense;...
Coleridge's, Samuel Taylor, (1)
Boks 7.208 20
Another class of books closely allied to these
[Autobiographies]...are those which may be called Table-Talks: of which
the best are Saadi's Gulistan;...Coleridge's Table-Talk;...
co-life, n. (1)
Exp 3.78 6
The soul...is of a fatal and universal power, admitting no co-life.
Coliseum, n. (1)
Art2 7.55 6
The amphitheatre of the old Romans,--any one may see its
origin who looks at the crowd running together to see any fight...in the
street. The first comers gather round in a circle...and farther back they
climb on fences or window-sills, and so make a cup of which the object of
attention occupies the hollow area. The architect put benches in this, and
enclosed the cup with a wall,--and behold a Coliseum!
Coliseum, Rome, Italy, n. (1)
MAng1 12.220 21
Cardinal Farnese one day found [Michelangelo], when
an old man, walking alone in the Coliseum...
collapse, v. (1)
Elo2 8.126 27
...we have all of us known men who lose...their fancy, at any
sudden call. Some men, on such pressure, collapse...
collar, n. (1)
FSLC 11.201 12
Hills and Halletts, servile editors by the hundred, we
could have spared. But [Webster]...the first man of the North, in the very
moment of mounting the throne, irresistibly taking the bit in his mouth and
the collar on his neck...
collared, v. (1)
EzRy 10.393 26
Was a man a sot...or had he quarrelled with his wife, or
collared his father...the good pastor [Ezra Ripley] knew his way straight to
that point...
collars, n. (1)
EWI 11.111 10
...iron collars were riveted on [West Indian slaves'] necks
with iron prongs ten inches long;...
collate, v. (1)
LE 1.171 20
Translate, collate, distil all the systems, it steads you nothing;...
colleague, n. (2)
Imtl 8.331 25
When my friend at last left Congress, [the two men] parted,
his colleague remaining there;...
EzRy 10.388 22
...the Doctor [Ezra Ripley] presently said, Mr. Merriam,
my brother and colleague, Mr. Frost, has come to take tea with me.
colleagues, n. (9)
NER 3.252 1
The spirit of protest and of detachment drove the members of
these [Sabbath and Bible] Conventions to bear testimony against the
Church, and immediately afterwards to declare...their independence of their
colleagues...
ET5 5.90 8
Sir Robert Peel knew the Blue Books by heart. His colleagues
and rivals carry Hansard in their heads.
Boks 7.215 2
...the player in Consuelo insists that he and his colleagues on
the boards have taught princes the fine etiquette and strokes of grace and
dignity which they practise with so much effect in their villas...
PC 8.222 2
When the correlation of the sciences was announced by Oersted
and his colleagues, it was no surprise;...
Imtl 8.331 19
[One of the men] said that when he entered the Senate he
became in a short time intimate with one of his colleagues...
Aris 10.61 4
In the presence of the Chapter it is easy for each member to
carry himself royally and well; but in the absence of his colleagues and in
the presence of mean people he is tempted to accept the low customs of
towns.
EWI 11.113 25
The apprenticeship system [in the West Indies] is
understood to have proceeded from Lord Brougham, and was by him urged
on his colleagues...
AsSu 11.249 17
[Charles Sumner] meekly bore the cold shoulder from
some of his New England colleagues...
ALin 11.331 9
The profound good opinion which the people of Illinois and
of the West had conceived of [Lincoln], and which they had imparted to
their colleagues...was not rash...
collect, v. (13)
MR 1.243 8
...he who can create works of art needs not collect them.
Con 1.311 3
[Existing institutions] have lost no time and spared no expense
to collect libraries, museums, galleries, colleges, palaces, hospitals,
observatories, cities.
Hist 2.38 19
[Each man] shall collect into a focus the rays of nature.
ET4 5.58 14
...[going into guest-quarters] was the only way in which, in a
poor country, a poor king with many retainers could be kept alive when he
leaves his own farm to collect his dues through the kingdom.
ET5 5.91 17
Lord Elgin, at Athens, saw the imminent ruin of the Greek
remains, set up his scaffoldings...and, after five years' labor to collect them,
got his marbles on ship-board.
Pow 6.74 22
[Many an artist] is up to nature and the First Cause in his
thought. But the spasm to collect and swing his whole being into one act, he
has not.
DL 7.116 2
Aristides was made general receiver of Greece, to collect the
tribute which each state was to furnish against the barbarian.
PI 8.24 8
The senses collect the surface facts of matter.
Res 8.139 23
[Nature] shows us only surfaces, but she is million fathoms
deep. What spaces! what durations!...in humanity, millions of lives of men
to collect the first observations on which our astronomy is built;...
JBS 11.278 6
...it chanced that in Pennsylvania, where he was sent by his
father to collect cattle, [John Brown] fell in with a boy whom he heartily
liked...
Wom 11.411 23
[Women] should be found in fit surroundings...with all
advantages which the means of man collect...
CL 12.136 25
...[Linnaeus] summoned his class to go with him on
excursions on foot into the country, to collect plants and insects, birds and
eggs.
CL 12.159 17
In [the Persians'] belief, wild beasts, especially gazelles,
collect around an insane person...
collected, v. (25)
MR 1.238 23
...when [a man] comes to give all the goods he has year after
year collected, in one estate to his son...the son finds his hands full...
MR 1.238 27
...when [a man] comes to give all the goods he has year after
year collected, in one estate to his son...and cannot give him the skill and
experience which made or collected these...the son finds his hands full...
Con 1.315 24
...last evening our family was collected...
OS 2.270 5
...I desire...to report what hints I have collected of the
transcendent simplicity and energy of the Highest Law.
NER 3.272 19
In the circle of the rankest tories that could be collected in
England, Old or New, let a powerful and stimulating intellect...act on them,
and very quickly these frozen conservators will yield to the friendly
influence...
UGM 4.5 8
...our philosophy finds one essence collected or distributed.
SwM 4.124 22
That metempsychosis which is familiar in the old
mythology of the Greeks, collected in Ovid...in Swedenborg's mind has a
more philosophic character.
ShP 4.190 23
Every master has found his materials collected...
ShP 4.200 8
The Liturgy...is...a translation of the prayers and forms of the
Catholic church,--these collected, too, in long periods...
NMW 4.233 27
Horrible anecdotes may no doubt be collected from
[Napoleon's] history...
ET4 5.57 2
The Heimskringla...collected by Snorro Sturleson, is the Iliad
and Odyssey of English history.
ET8 5.139 22
No nation was ever so rich in able men [as England];...men
of such temper, that, like Baron Vere, had one seen him returning from a
victory, he would by his silence have suspected that he had lost the day;
and, had he beheld him in a retreat, he would have collected him a
conqueror by the cheerfulness of his spirit.
ET9 5.152 6
[George of Cappadocia] saved his money, embraced
Arianism, collected a library...
ET12 5.202 23
...the committee charged with the affair [the purchase of
Thomas Lawrence's art collection] had collected three thousand pounds...
ET12 5.211 27
...the rich libraries collected at every one of many thousands
of houses [in England], give an advantage not to be attained by a youth in
this country...
ET16 5.274 3
I thought it natural that [travelling Americans] should give
some time to works of art collected here [in London] which they cannot
find at home...
Pow 6.55 8
During...trials of strength, wrestling, fighting, a large amount of
blood is collected in the arteries...
DL 7.130 4
...let the creations of the plastic arts be collected with care in
galleries by the piety and taste of the people...
Cour 7.274 13
There are ever appearing in the world men who, almost as
soon as they are born, take a bee-line to...the axe of the tyrant, like...Jesus
and Socrates. Look...at the folios of the Brothers Bollandi, who collected
the lives of twenty-five thousand martyrs, confessors, ascetics and self-tormentors.
PPo 8.255 5
...Hafiz does not appear to have set any great value on his
songs, since his scholars collected them for the first time after his death.
LLNE 10.351 13
Aladdin and his magician, or the beautiful Scheherezade
can alone, in these prosaic times before the [Fourierist] sight, describe the
material splendors collected there [in the Golden Horn].
EdAd 11.391 15
Here is the standing problem of Natural Science, and the
merits of her great interpreters to be determined; the encyclopaedical
Humboldt, and the intrepid generalizations collected by the author of the
Vestiges of Creation [Robert Chambers].
CL 12.137 7
...the Professor [Linnaeus] was generally attended by two
hundred students, and, when they returned, they marched through the
streets of Upsala in a festive procession...with loads of natural productions
collected on the way.
ACri 12.289 22
Goethe, who had collected all the diabolical hints in men
and nature for traits for his Walpurgis Nacht, continued the humor of
collecting such horrors after this first occasion had passed...
Pray 12.350 20
...there are scattered about in the earth a few records of
these devout hours [of prayer], which it would edify us to read, could they
be collected in a more catholic spirit than the wretched and repulsive
volumes which usurp that name.
collecting, v. (4)
Schr 10.273 22
If [the scholar] is not kindling his torch or collecting oil, he
will fear to go by a workshop;...
LLNE 10.331 17
[Everett] had a great talent for collecting facts...
EWI 11.127 25
...when, in 1789, the first privy council report of evidence
on the [slave] trade (a bulky folio embodying all the facts which the
London Committee had been engaged for years in collecting...) was
presented to the House of Commons, a late day being named for the
discussion...Mr. Wilberforce, Mr. Pitt, the Prime Minister, and other
gentlemen, took advantage of the postponement to retire into the country to
read the report.
ACri 12.289 24
Goethe, who had collected all the diabolical hints in men
and nature for traits for his Walpurgis Nacht, continued the humor of
collecting such horrors after this first occasion had passed...
collection, n. (10)
Pt1 3.38 10
If I have not found that excellent combination of gifts in my
countrymen which I seek, neither could I aid myself to fix the idea of the
poet by reading now and then in Chalmers's collection of five centuries of
English poets.
Mrs1 3.126 8
...every collection of men furnishes some example of the
class [of gentlemen];...
PPh 4.78 26
When we say [of Plato], Here is a fine collection of fables;...
we speak as boys...
NMW 4.251 10
Medicine is a collection of uncertain prescriptions [said
Bonaparte]...
ET12 5.202 18
In Sir Thomas Lawrence's collection at London were the
cartoons of Raphael and Michael Angelo.
ET12 5.203 6
I saw the whole [Thomas Lawrence art collection] collection
in April, 1848.
DL 7.131 23
A collection of this kind [a library and museum]...would
dignify the town...
Dem1 10.24 14
...suppose a diligent collection and study of these occult
facts were made, they are merely physiological, semi-medical...
EWI 11.141 1
Mr. Clarkson, early in his career, made a collection of
African productions and manufactures, as specimens of the arts and culture
of the negro;...
ACri 12.288 16
...some men swear with genius. I knew a poet in whose
talent Nature carried this freak so far that his only graceful verses were
pretty blasphemies. The better the worse, you will say; and I own it reminds
one of Vathek's collection of monstrous men with humps of a picturesque
peak...
collectively, adv. (4)
NMW 4.251 12
Medicine is a collection of uncertain prescriptions [said
Bonaparte], the results of which, taken collectively, are more fatal than
useful to mankind.
ET4 5.51 11
Neither do this people [the English] appear to be of one stem,
but collectively a better race than any from which they are derived.
Elo1 7.75 11
...we may say of such collectively that the habit of oratory is
apt to disqualify them for eloquence.
Aris 10.39 15
I wish...men who...can feel and convey the sense which is
only collectively or totally expressed by a population;...
collector, n. (4)
Exp 3.62 23
A collector peeps into all the picture-shops of Europe for a
landscape of Poussin...
Exp 3.63 6
A collector recently bought at public auction, in London, for
one hundred and fifty-seven guineas, an autograph of Shakspeare;...
ET2 5.32 5
The busiest talk with leisure and convenience at sea, and
sometimes a memorable fact turns up, which you...seize with the joy of a
collector.
Bty 6.284 20
The collector has dried all the plants in his herbal, but he has
lost weight and humor.
Collector of the Customs, n. (1)
OA 7.333 26
[Mr. Lechmere] was Collector of the Customs for many years
under the Royal Government.
collectors, n. (1)
Tran 1.358 19
Perhaps too there might be room [in society] for the exciters
and monitors; collectors of the heavenly spark...
collects, v. (5)
MR 1.245 14
How can the man who has learned but one art, procure all the
conveniences of life honestly? Shall we say all we think?-Perhaps with his
own hands. Suppose he collects or makes them ill;-yet he has learned their
lesson.
UGM 4.28 16
...the law of individuality collects its secret strength: you are
you, and I am I, and so we remain.
GoW 4.287 23
When [Goethe] sits down to write a drama or a tale, he
collects and sorts his observations from a hundred sides...
Mem 12.93 17
The memory collects and re-collects.
EurB 12.371 8
[Tennyson] is...a tasteful bachelor who collects quaint
staircases and groined ceilings.
college, adj. (25)
LT 1.265 4
Let us paint the agitator...and the college professor...
Int 2.330 10
A true man never acquires after college rules.
Mrs1 3.130 10
...come from year to year and see how permanent [the
distinction of caste or fashion] is, in this Boston or New York life of
man... ... Here are associations whose ties go over and under and through it,
a meeting of merchants...a college class...
ET2 5.32 7
...under the best conditions, a voyage [at sea] is one of the
severest tests to try a man. A college examination is nothing to it.
ET12 5.199 16
I was the guest of my friend [Arthur Hugh Clough] in Oriel
[College, Oxford]...and I lived on college hospitalities.
ET12 5.204 21
The reading men [at Oxford]...two days before the
examination...lounge, ride, or run, to be fresh on the college doomsday.
ET12 5.205 1
The whole expense, says Professor Sewel, of ordinary
college tuition at Oxford, is about sixteen guineas a year.
Ctr 6.144 14
One of the benefits of a college education is to show the boy
its little avail.
CbW 6.261 16
...perhaps [the rich man] could pass a college examination,
and take his degrees;...
DL 7.124 19
I have seen finely endowed men at college festivals...
returning, as it seemed, the same boys who went away.
WD 7.169 5
In college terms, and in years that followed, the young
graduate, when the Commencement anniversary returned, though he were
in a swamp, would see a festive light...
WD 7.180 19
...you must be a day yourself, and not interrogate it like a
college professor.
Boks 7.191 7
College education is the reading of certain books which the
common sense of all scholars agrees will represent the science already
accumulated.
Elo2 8.114 15
...you may find [the orator] in some lowly Bethel, by the
seaside...a man whom college drill or patronage never made...
QO 8.183 21
In our own college days we remember hearing other pieces of
Mr. Webster's advice to students...
QO 8.195 20
It is curious what new interest an old author acquires by
official canonization in...Hallam, or other historian of literature. Their...
citation of a passage, carries the sentimental value of a college diploma.
Dem1 10.17 7
...[the belief in luck] is not the power...which we...found
college professorships to expound.
Edc1 10.140 4
How we envy in later life the happy youths to whom their
boisterous games and rough exercise furnish the precise element which
frames and sets off their school and college tasks...
Edc1 10.147 25
By many steps...the hesitating collegian, in the school
debate, in college clubs...comes at last to full, secure, triumphant unfolding
of his thought in the popular assembly...
Edc1 10.150 24
[In colleges] You have to work for large classes instead of
individuals;...you grow departmental, routinary, military almost with your
discipline and college police.
LLNE 10.327 18
College classes, military corps, or trades-unions may
fancy themselves indissoluble for a moment, over their wine;...
LLNE 10.334 13
...not a sentence was written in academic exercises, not a
declamation attempted in the college chapel, but showed the omnipresence
of [Everett's] genius to youthful heads.
Milt1 12.260 7
At nineteen years, in a college exercise, [Milton] addresses
his native language, saying to it that it would be his choice to leave trifles
for a grave argument...
ACri 12.288 24
What traveller has not listened to the vigor of...the deep
stomach of an English drayman's execration. I remember an occasion when
a proficient in this style came from North Street to Cambridge and drew a
crowd of young critics in the college yard...
Let 12.398 2
There is...a paralysis of the active faculties, which falls on
young men of this country as soon as they have finished their college
education...
College, adj. (1)
OA 7.315 16
...the naivete of [Josiah Quincy's] eager preference of Cicero'
s opinions to King David's, gave unusual interest to the College festival.
College, Brasenose, Oxford, (1)
ET12 5.207 2
Greek erudition exists on the Isis and Cam, whether the
Maud man or the Brasenose man be properly ranked or not;...
College, Christ Church, Ox (2)
ET12 5.201 9
Albert Alaskie...was entertained with Stage-plays in the
Refectory of Christ-Church [College, Oxford] in 1583.
ET12 5.201 11
Isaac Casaubon...was admitted to Christ-Church [College,
Oxford], in July, 1613.
College, Eton, England, adj (1)
ET12 5.206 23
...an Eton captain can write Latin longs and shorts...
College, Eton, England, n. (2)
ET9 5.150 12
The habit of brag runs through all classes [in England]...
through Wordsworth, Carlyle, Mill and Sydney Smith, down to the boys of
Eton.
ET12 5.208 5
It is contended by those who have been bred at Eton,
Harrow, Rugby and Westminster, that the public sentiment within each of
those schools is high-toned and manly;...
College, Harvard, n. (15)
Elo2 8.123 1
In the early years of this century, Mr. [John Quincy] Adams...
was elected Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory in Harvard College.
Elo2 8.127 20
...on going up the pulpit-stairs [Dr. Charles Chauncy] was
informed that a little boy had fallen into Frog Pond on the Common and
was drowned, and the doctor was requested to improve the sad occasion.
The doctor was much distressed, and in his prayer he hesitated...he prayed
for Harvard College...
Thor 10.451 9
[Thoreau] was graduated at Harvard College in 1837...
Thor 10.458 26
Mr. Thoreau repaired to the President [of Harvard
University], who stated to him the rules and usages, which permitted the
loan of books...to clergymen who were alumni, and to some others resident
within a circle of ten miles' radius from the College.
Thor 10.459 2
Mr. Thoreau explained to the President [of Harvard
University]...that the library was useless, yes, and President and College
useless, on the terms of his rules...
Thor 10.459 4
Mr. Thoreau explained to the President [of Harvard
University]...that the one benefit he owed to the College was its library...
HDC 11.57 10
...Concord...in 1653, subscribed a sum for several years to
the support of Harvard College.
HCom 11.343 20
...standing here in Harvard College...in Massachusetts...I
think the little state bigger than I knew.
HCom 11.344 8
A single company in the Forty-fourth Massachusetts
Regiment contained thirty-five sons of Harvard.
CPL 11.498 24
Peter Bulkeley sent his son John to the first class that
graduated at Harvard College in 1642...
CPL 11.498 26
Major Simon Willard's son Samuel graduated at Harvard in
1659...
CPL 11.499 3
...Concord counted fourteen graduates of Harvard in its first
century...
CInt 12.126 6
Harvard College has no voice in Harvard College, but State
Street votes it down on every ballot.
CInt 12.126 7
Harvard College has no voice in Harvard College, but State
Street votes it down on every ballot.
Bost 12.195 11
The [Massachusetts] colony was planted in 1620; in 1638
Harvard College was founded.
College, King's, Chapel, C (2)
ET12 5.199 6
I regret that I had but a single day wherein to see King's
College Chapel [Cambridge]...
F 6.36 25
Christopher Wren said of the beautiful King's College chapel,
that if anybody would tell him where to lay the first stone, he would build
such another.
College, Magdalen [Maud], (1)
ET12 5.207 2
Greek erudition exists on the Isis and Cam, whether the
Maud man or the Brasenose man be properly ranked or not;...
College, Medical, n. (1)
Cour 7.275 27
The Medical College piles up in its museum its grim
monsters of morbid anatomy...
college, n. (76)
AmS 1.90 12
The book, the college...stop with some past utterance of
genius.
Tran 1.349 24
...[Transcendentalists] have...found that...from the courtesies
of the academy and the college to the conventions of the cotillon-room and
the morning call, there is a spirit of cowardly compromise...
Tran 1.356 13
Grave seniors insist on [Transcendentalists'] respect...to
some vocation, or college...which they resist as what does not concern them.
YA 1.388 15
...the college, the church, the hospital, the theatre, the hotel,
the road, the ship of the capitalist,-whatever goes to secure, adorn, enlarge
these is good;...
Hist 2.17 19
There is nothing but is related to us...kingdom, college, tree,
horse, or iron shoe...
SR 2.52 14
...the education at college of fools;...though...I sometimes...give
the dollar, it is a wicked dollar...
SR 2.56 11
Yet is the discontent of the multitude more formidable than that
of the senate and the college.
Comp 2.109 9
...this law of laws [Compensation], which the pulpit, the
senate and the college deny, is hourly preached in all markets and
workshops by flights of proverbs...
SL 2.156 10
You think because you...have given no opinion on the times...
on the college...that your verdict is still expected with curiosity as a
reserved wisdom.
NR 3.242 25
[Nature] suffers no seat to be vacant in her college.
NER 3.265 16
Many of us have differed in opinion, and we could find no
man who could make the truth plain, but possibly a college, or an
ecclesiastical council, might.
MoS 4.151 8
Picture, statue, temple, railroad, steam-engine, existed first in
an artist's mind, without flaw, mistake, or friction, which impair the
executed models. So did the Church, the State, college, court, social circle,
and all the institutions.
MoS 4.162 19
A single odd volume of Cotton's translation of the Essays
[of Montaigne] remained to me from my father's library, when a boy. It lay
long neglected, until, after many years, when I was newly escaped from
college, I read the book...
ET12 5.199 16
I was the guest of my friend [Arthur Hugh Clough] in Oriel
[College, Oxford], was housed close upon that college...
ET12 5.202 12
It is usual for a nobleman, or indeed for almost every
wealthy student [at Oxford], on quitting college to leave behind him some
article of plate;...
ET12 5.204 4
[The Bodleian Library's] catalogue is the standard catalogue
on the desk of every library in Oxford. In each several college they
underscore in red ink on this catalogue the titles of books contained in the
library of that college...
ET12 5.204 6
[The Bodleian Library's] catalogue is the standard catalogue
on the desk of every library in Oxford. In each several college they
underscore in red ink on this catalogue the titles of books contained in the
library of that college...
ET12 5.205 16
...the known sympathy of entire Britain in what is done
there [at the universities], justify a dedication to study in the undergraduate
such as cannot easily be in America, where his college is half suspected by
the Freshman to be insignificant in the scale beside trade and politics.
ET12 5.206 1
The number of fellowships at Oxford is 540, averaging 200
pounds a year, with lodging and diet at the college.
ET12 5.212 16
...we all send our sons to college, and though he be a
genius, the youth must take his chance.
ET12 5.213 3
It is easy to carp at colleges, and the college, if we will wait
for it, will have its own turn.
F 6.26 13
[The mind] dates from itself; not from...college...
Ctr 6.155 6
...a tender boy who wears his rusty cap and outgrown coat, that
he may secure the coveted place in college...is educated to some purpose.
SS 7.11 2
The people, not the college, is the writer's home.
DL 7.122 9
...[the most polite and accurate men of Oxford University]
found such an immenseness of wit and such a solidity of judgment in [Lord
Falkland]...that they frequently resorted and dwelt with him, as in a college
situated in a purer air;...
DL 7.125 6
In each the circumstance signalized differs, but in each it is
made the coals of an ever-burning egotism. In one, it was his going to sea;
in a second, the difficulties he combated in going to college;...
Suc 7.299 15
Is...the college where you first knew the dreams of fancy and
joys of thought, only boards or brick and mortar?
SA 8.82 20
It is a commonplace of romances to show the ungainly manners
of the pedant who has lived too long in college.
Elo2 8.123 5
I remember, when, long after, I entered college, hearing the
story of the numbers of coaches in which his friends came from Boston to
hear [John Quincy Adams].
Insp 8.292 10
...[conversation is] the college where you learn what
thoughts are...
Grts 8.304 24
When [young men] have learned that the parlor and the
college and the counting-room demand as much courage as the sea or the
camp, they will be willing to consult their own strength and education in
their choice of place.
PerF 10.77 20
Every valuable person who joins in an enterprise,-is it a
piece of industry, or the founding of a colony or a college...what he chiefly
brings...is...his thoughts...
PerF 10.87 24
...the college goes against [the moral sentiment]...
Edc1 10.126 3
Humanly speaking, the school, the college, society, make
the difference between men.
Edc1 10.146 23
...[Fellowes] was able to reconstruct, in the British
Museum...the perfect model of the Ionic trophy-monument...which had
been destroyed by earthquakes, then by iconoclast Christians, then by
savage Turks. But mark that in the task he...had formed a college for
himself;...
Edc1 10.149 22
Happy the natural college thus self-instituted around every
natural teacher;...
Edc1 10.150 2
The college was to be the nurse and home of genius;...
Edc1 10.150 11
Appetite and indolence [young men] have, but no
enthusiasm. These come in numbers to the college...
Edc1 10.156 27
No discretion that can be lodged...with the overseers or
visitors of an academy, of a college, can at all avail to reach these
difficulties and perplexities [in education]...
MoL 10.257 24
I learn with joy and with deep respect that this college has
sent its full quota to the field.
Schr 10.261 9
...the society of lettered men is a university which does not
bound itself with the walls of one cloister or college...
Plu 10.321 15
[The language of the 1718 edition of Plutarch] runs through
the whole scale of conversation in...the palace, the college and the church.
EzRy 10.381 16
...[Ezra Ripley's] father wished him to be qualified to
teach a grammar school, not thinking himself able to send one son to
college without injury to his other children.
EzRy 10.381 20
...[Ezra Ripley's] father agreed with the late Rev. Dr.
Forbes of Gloucester...to fit Ezra for college...
EzRy 10.381 24
...when fitted for college, the son [Ezra Ripley] could not
be contented with teaching...
EzRy 10.382 14
The commencement of the Revolutionary War greatly
interrupted [Ezra Ripley's] education at college.
EzRy 10.382 15
In 1775, in [Ezra Ripley's] senior year, the college
[Harvard] was removed from Cambridge to this town.
EzRy 10.395 14
...in college [Ezra Ripley] was called Holy Ripley.
Thor 10.452 11
At this time, a strong, healthy youth, fresh from college,
whilst all his companions were choosing their profession...it was inevitable
that [Thoreau's] thoughts should be exercised on the same question...
Thor 10.472 15
No college ever offered [Thoreau] a diploma...
HDC 11.56 22
The college had been already gathered [at Concord] in 1638.
HDC 11.86 5
On the village green [of Concord] have been the steps...of
Langdon, and the college over which he presided.
EWI 11.125 27
...[slavery] does not love the newspaper, the mail-bag, a
college...
FSLC 11.182 3
The college, the churches, the schools, the very shops and
factories, are discredited [by the Fugitive Slave Law];...
Koss 11.400 12
You [Kossuth] may well sit a doctor in the college of
liberty.
CPL 11.498 27
Major Simon Willard's son Samuel graduated at Harvard in
1659, and was for six years, from 1701 to 1707, vice-president of the
college;...
CPL 11.499 1
Major Simon Willard's son Samuel graduated at Harvard in
1659...and his son Joseph was president of the college from 1781 to 1804;...
FRep 11.511 4
It is a rule that holds in economy as well as in hydraulics
that you must have a source higher than your tap. The mills, the shops...the
college and the church, have all found out this secret.
CInt 12.113 7
...here in the college we are in the presence of the
constituency and the principle [of freedom] itself.
CInt 12.115 3
...either science and literature is a hypocrisy, or it is not. If it
be, then...turn your college into barracks and warehouses...
CInt 12.115 12
...if the intellectual interest be, as I hold, no hypocrisy, but
the only reality,-then it behooves us...to give, among other possessions,
the college into its hand...
CInt 12.115 22
...even if we had no son or friend [in college], yet the
college is part of the community...
CInt 12.116 18
These are giddy times, and, you say, the college will be
deserted.
CInt 12.116 23
...the college was false to its trust...
CInt 12.117 5
...[the scholars]...gave degrees and literary and social honors
to those whom they ought to have rebuked and exposed, incurring the
contempt of those whom they ought to have put in fear; then the college is
suicidal;...
CInt 12.123 23
...the idea of a college is an assembly of such men, obedient
each to this pure light [of thought]...
CInt 12.125 24
...how often we have had repeated the trials of the young
man who made no figure at college because his own methods were new and
extraordinary...
CInt 12.126 22
...a college should have no mean ambition...
CInt 12.127 20
...I thought a college was a place not to train talents...but to
adorn Genius...
CInt 12.127 24
...I thought...a college was to teach you geometry, or the
lovely laws of space and figure;...
CInt 12.128 22
If your college and your literature are not felt, it is because
the truth is not in them.
CInt 12.131 2
...the examination for admission and the examination for
degrees and honors may be lax in this college and severe in that...but 't is
very certain than an examination is yonder before us...
CL 12.161 8
The college is not so wise as the mechanic's shop...
Bost 12.196 4
The universality of an elementary education in New England
is her praise and her power in the whole world. To the schools succeeds the
village lyceum...where every week through the winter, lectures are read and
debates sustained which prove a college for the young rustic.
Milt1 12.257 7
Handsome to a proverb, [Milton] was called the lady of his
college.
ACri 12.291 21
...I sometimes wish that the Board of Education might
carry out the project of a college for graduates of our universities, to which
editors and members of Congress...might repair, and learn to sink what we
could best spare of our words;...
College, n. (9)
LE 1.155 11
...I am not less glad or sanguine at the meeting of scholars,
than when, a boy, I first saw the graduates of my own College assembled at
their anniversary.
LE 1.160 6
...neither Greece nor Rome...nor the College of the Sorbonne...
is to command any longer.
LE 1.185 8
...I thought that standing...on the threshold of this College...you
would not be sorry to be admonished of those primary duties of the
intellect...
OA 7.334 5
[John Adams] talked of Whitefield, and remembered when he
was a Freshman in College to have come into town to the Old South church
(I think) to hear him...
MoL 10.241 4
Gentlemen of the Literary Societies: Some of you...to-morrow
will receive the parting honors of the College.
LLNE 10.329 8
Authority falls, in Church, College, Courts of Law,
Faculties, Medicine.
Koss 11.400 9
You [Kossuth] have earned your own nobility at home. We
[Americans] admit you ad eundem (as they say at College).
CInt 12.127 5
The College should hold the profound thought, and the
Church the great heart to which the nation should turn...
CInt 12.127 10
...these two [the College and the Church] should be
counterbalancing to the bad politics and selfish trade. But there is but one
institution, and not three. The Church and the College now take their tone
from the City...
College, New, Oxford Unive (1)
ET16 5.290 20
William of Wykeham's shrine tomb was unlocked for us,
and Carlyle took hold of the recumbent statue's marble hands and patted
them affectionately, for he rightly values the brave man who built Windsor
and this Cathedral and the School here and New College at Oxford.
College of Cardinals, n. (1)
Art2 7.55 14
The College of Cardinals were originally the parish priests of
Rome.
College, Oriel, Oxford, n. (2)
ET12 5.199 13
...I availed myself of some repeated invitations to Oxford
where I had introductions to Dr. Daubeny...and to the Regius Professor of
Divinity, as well as to a valued friend [Arthur Hugh Clough], a fellow of
Oriel...
ET12 5.199 15
I was the guest of my friend [Arthur Hugh Clough] in Oriel
[College, Oxford]...
College, St. John's, Cambr (1)
CPL 11.498 4
The town [Concord] was settled by a pious company of non-conformists
from England, and the printed books of their pastor and leader,
Rev. Peter Bulkeley, sometime fellow of Saint John's College in
Cambridge, England, testify the ardent sentiment which they shared.
college-bred, adj. (1)
NER 3.260 6
...in a few months the most conservative circles of Boston and
New York had quite forgotten who of their gownsmen was college-bred,
and who was not.
college-made, adj. (1)
ACri 12.285 5
...when I read of various extraordinary polyglots, self-made
or college-made, who can understand fifty languages, I answer that I shall
be glad and surprised to find that they know one.
colleges, n. (47)
AmS 1.89 6
Colleges are built on [a book].
AmS 1.93 18
Colleges...have their indispensable office, - to teach
elements.
AmS 1.94 3
...our American colleges will recede in their public importance,
whilst they grow richer every year.
AmS 1.98 13
Colleges and books only copy the language which the field
and the work-yard made.
Con 1.311 4
[Existing institutions] have lost no time and spared no expense
to collect libraries, museums, galleries, colleges, palaces, hospitals,
observatories, cities.
YA 1.375 9
...we found colleges and hospitals, for remote generations.
SR 2.76 1
If the finest genius studies at one of our colleges and is not
installed in an office within one year afterwards...it seems to his friends and
to himself that he is right in being disheartened...
NER 3.257 13
...we are shut up in schools, and colleges, and recitation-rooms,
for ten or fifteen years, and come out at last with a bag of wind...
NER 3.258 25
...the Good Spirit never cared for the colleges...
NER 3.259 4
...the Good Spirit never cared for the colleges, and though all
men and boys were now drilled in Latin, Greek and Mathematics, it...was
now creating and feeding other matters at other ends of the world. But in a
hundred high schools and colleges this warfare against common-sense still
goes on.
NER 3.259 10
Some thousands of young men are graduated at our colleges
in this country every year...
SwM 4.103 9
...[Swedenborg] is not to be measured by whole colleges of
ordinary scholars.
GoW 4.270 26
[Goethe] appears at a time...when, in the absence of heroic
characters, a social comfort and cooperation have come in. There is...no
prophet or saint, but colleges of divinity;...
ET4 5.67 13
...[the fair Saxon man] is moulded...for colleges, churches,
charities and colonies.
ET12 5.199 8
I regret that I had but a single day wherein to see...the
beautiful lawns and gardens of the colleges [at Cambridge]...
ET12 5.206 17
The income of the nineteen colleges [at Oxford] is
conjectured at 150,000 pounds a year.
ET12 5.209 11
...so eminent are the members that a glance at the calendars
will show that in all the world one cannot be in better company than on the
books of one of the larger Oxford or Cambridge colleges.
ET12 5.211 4
In seeing these youths [at Oxford] I believed I saw already an
advantage in vigor and color and general habit, over their contemporaries in
the American colleges.
ET12 5.213 3
It is easy to carp at colleges...
ET13 5.226 5
The wise legislator will spend on temples, schools, libraries,
colleges...
ET14 5.235 6
The [English] children and laborers use the Saxon unmixed.
The Latin unmixed is abandoned to the colleges and Parliament.
ET14 5.252 13
The tone of colleges and of scholars and of literary society
[in England] has this mortal air.
Ill 6.315 4
...I have known gentlemen of great stake in the community, but
whose sympathies were cold,--presidents of colleges and governors and
senators...
Civ 7.21 27
'T is wonderful how soon a piano gets into a log hut on the
frontier. ... With it comes a Latin grammar,--and one of those tow-head
boys has written a hymn on Sunday. Now let colleges, now let senates take
heed!...
Boks 7.191 22
...the colleges, whilst they provide us with libraries, furnish
no professor of books;...
Chr2 10.113 16
...the education in the divinity colleges may well hesitate
and vary.
Edc1 10.148 15
...in education...we are continually trying costly machinery
against nature, in patent schools and academies and in great colleges and
universities.
MoL 10.243 9
...professors of colleges sold cigars, mince-pies, matches [in
California]...
LLNE 10.347 17
...Ah, [Robert Owen] said...there are as tender hearts and
as much good will to serve men, in palaces, as in colleges.
Thor 10.451 11
...[Thoreau] seldom thanked colleges for their service to
him...
LVB 11.90 8
We have seen some of [the Cherokees] in our schools and
colleges.
FSLC 11.181 10
...presidents of colleges, and professors...not so much as a
snatch of an old song for freedom, dares intrude on their passive obedience
[to the Fugitive Slave Law].
FSLN 11.229 8
The way in which the country was dragged to consent to
this [Fugitive Slave Law], and the disastrous defection...of the men of
letters, of the colleges...was the darkest passage in the history.
HCom 11.342 17
[The war] charged with power, peaceful, amiable men, to
whose life war and discord were abhorrent. What an infusion of character
went out from this and other colleges!
HCom 11.343 20
...standing here in Harvard College, the parent of all the
colleges; in Massachusetts...I think the little state bigger than I knew.
CPL 11.496 17
Our founder [of the Concord Library] has found the many
admirable examples which have lately honored the country, of benefactors
who have not waited to bequeath colleges and hospitals...
CInt 12.115 16
At this season, the colleges keep their anniversaries...
CInt 12.116 8
If the colleges were better...we should all rush to their
gates;...
CInt 12.122 5
...it happens often that the wellbred and refined...dwelling
amidst colleges, churches, and scientific museums...are more vicious and
malignant than the rude country people...
CInt 12.124 12
...there is a certain shyness...of a master of art in colleges...
CInt 12.124 17
...thought is as rare in colleges as in cities.
CInt 12.125 8
...unless...the professor has a generous sympathy with
genius...the best scholar, he for whom colleges exist, finds himself a
stranger and an orphan therein.
CInt 12.128 13
[The scholar] will greet joyfully the wise teacher, but
colleges and teachers are no wise essential to him;...
CInt 12.128 19
I would have you rely on Nature ever,-wise, omnific,
thousand-handed Nature...which can do very well without colleges...
CInt 12.130 26
Our colleges may differ much in the scale of requirements...
but 't is very certain than an examination is yonder before us...
CL 12.157 18
Our schools and colleges strangely neglect the general
education of the eye.
Bost 12.186 19
New England is a sort of Scotland. 'T is hard to say why.
Climate is much; then, old accumulation of the means,-books, schools,
colleges, literary society;...
college-songs, n. (1)
Edc1 10.140 10
The young giant, brown from his hunting-tramp, tells his
story well, interlarded with lucky allusions...to college-songs, to Walter
Scott;...
collegian, n. (1)
Edc1 10.147 24
By many steps...the hesitating collegian, in the school
debate, in college clubs...comes at last to full, secure, triumphant unfolding
of his thought in the popular assembly...
collegians, n. (3)
ET4 5.71 22
Their young boiling clerks and lusty collegians [in England]
like the company of horses better than the company of professors.
Boks 7.215 8
...I often see traces of the Scotch or the French novel in the
courtesy and brilliancy of young midshipmen, collegians and clerks.
LLNE 10.369 4
[Brook Farm] was a close union...of clergymen, young
collegians, merchants, mechanics, farmers' sons and daughters...
Collier, John Payne, n. (3)
ShP 4.206 14
Malone, Warburton, Dyce and Collier have wasted their oil.
ShP 4.208 12
Read the antique documents extricated, analyzed and
compared by the assiduous Dyce and Collier, and now read one of
[Shakespeare's] skyey sentences...and tell me if they match;...
Boks 7.221 11
Another member [of the literary club] meantime shall as
honestly search, sift and as truly report on British mythology...the histories
of Brut, Merlin and Welsh poetry;...a fourth, on Mysteries, Early Drama,
Gesta Romanorum, Collier, and Dyce, and the Camden Society.
colliers, n. (3)
PPh 4.53 7
[The Greeks] saw before them...no pitiless subdivision of
classes,--the doom of the pin-makers, the doom of...colliers;...
ET4 5.51 7
Everything English is a fusion of distant and antagonistic
elements. The language is mixed;...a country of extemes,--dukes and
chartists, Bishops of Durham and naked heathen colliers;...
ET5 5.83 23
[The English] are...the best iron-masters, colliers, wool-combers
and tanners in Europe.
Collignon, Auguste, n. (1)
MoS 4.162 26
It happened, when in Paris, in 1833, that, in the cemetery of
Pere Lachaise, I came to a tomb of Auguste Collignon...
Collingwood, Cuthbert, n. (4)
ET4 5.68 2
Nelson, dying at Trafalgar, sends his love to Lord
Collingwood...
ET4 5.68 5
Lord Collingwood, [Nelson's] comrade, was of a nature the
most affectionate and domestic.
ET5 5.86 21
Lord Collingwood was accustomed to tell his men that if they
could fire three well-directed broadsides in five minutes, no vessel could
resist them;...
ET7 5.122 26
Lord Collingwood would not accept his medal for victory on
14 February, 1797, if he did not receive one for victory on 1st June, 1794;...
Collins, Anthony, n. (1)
SS 7.5 18
[My friend] admired in Newton not so much his theory of the
moon as his letter to Collins...
Collins, Arthur, n. (1)
ET11 5.190 1
A sketch of the Earl of Shrewsbury, from the pen of Queen
Elizabeth's archbishop Parker;...the anecdotes preserved by the antiquaries
Fuller and Collins;...are favorable pictures of a romantic style of manners.
Collins, William, n. (1)
Insp 8.295 15
...read Collins and Gray;...
Collins's Peerage, n. (1)
ET18 5.302 22
...what a proud chivalry is indicated in Collins's Peerage,
through eight hundred years!
Collins's, William, n. (1)
PI 8.55 29
Keats disclosed by certain lines in his Hyperion this inward
skill; and Coleridge showed at least his love and appetency for it. It appears
in...Collins's Ode to Evening...
collision, n. (6)
ET2 5.27 24
...in hurrying over these abysses [of the sea], whatever dangers
we are running into, we are certainly running out of the risks of hundreds of
miles every day, which have their own chances of squall, collision, sea-stroke,
piracy, cold and thunder.
Ctr 6.149 10
Cities give us collision.
Wsp 6.210 12
Let a man attain the highest and broadest culture that any
American has possessed, then let him die by sea-storm, railroad collision,
or other accident, and all America will acquiesce that the best thing has
happened to him;...
War 11.152 19
War...brings men into such swift and close collision in
critical moments that man measures man.
JBB 11.271 19
The state judges fear collision between their two
allegiances;...
JBB 11.271 20
The state judges fear collision between their two
allegiances; but there are worse evils than collision;...
colloquially, adv. (1)
ACri 12.298 27
...[Carlyle's History of Frederick II is] a book...with a
range...of thought and wisdom so large, so colloquially elastic, that we not
so much read a stereotype page as we see the eyes of the writer looking into
ours...
collyrium, n. (1)
UGM 4.25 13
Great men are...a collyrium to clear our eyes from egotism...
Colman, Henry, n. (1)
AgMs 12.361 27
...necessity finds out when to go to Brighton, and when to
feed in the stall, better than Mr. [Henry] Colman can tell us.
Cologne Cathedral, n. (1)
II 12.70 10
Even those we call great men build substructures, and, like
Cologne Cathedral, these are never finished.
Cologne, Germany, adj. (1)
Mrs1 3.144 24
Another mode [of winning a place in fashion] is to pass
through all the degrees, spending a year and a day in St. Michael's Square,
being steeped in Cologne water...
Cologne, Germany, n. (1)
LE 1.160 6
...neither Greece nor Rome...nor the three Kings of Cologne...
is to command any longer.
cologne, n. (1)
FRep 11.533 17
We import trifles...modes, gloves and cologne...
colonel, n. (7)
NMW 4.234 14
Seruzier, a colonel of artillery, gives...the following sketch
of a scene after the battle of Austerlitz.
SMC 11.359 10
The army officers were welcome to their jest on [George
Prescott]...as the colonel who got off his horse when he saw one of his men
limp on the march, and told him to ride.
SMC 11.359 14
...[George Prescott] knew that his men had found out, first
that he was captain, then that he was colonel...
SMC 11.362 19
[George Prescott writes] There is a fine for officers
swearing in the army, and I have too many young men that are not used to
such talk. I told the colonel this morning I should [march my men away],
and shall...
SMC 11.364 10
...I [George Prescott] took six poles, and went to the
colonel, and told him I had got the poles for two tents, which would cover
twenty-four men...
SMC 11.365 16
It happened...that the Fifth Massachusetts was almost
unofficered. The colonel was, early in the day, disabled by a casualty;...
SMC 11.368 26
Here [at the battle of Gettysburg] Francis Buttrick...
Sergeant Appleton...were fatally wounded. The Colonel [George Prescott]
was hit by three bullets.
Colonel, n. (2)
Ctr 6.139 24
...Marshal Lannes said to a French officer, Know, Colonel,
that none but a poltroon will boast that he never was afraid.
SMC 11.369 9
The Colonel [George Prescott] took evident pleasure in the
fact that he could account for all his men.
colonels, n. (1)
SMC 11.360 3
...these [Civil War] colonels, captains and lieutenants, and
the privates too, are domestic men...
colonial, adj. (4)
ET8 5.143 1
...the history of the [English] nation discloses, at every turn,
this original predilection for private independence, and however this
inclination may have been disturbed by the bribes with which their vast
colonial power has warped men out of orbit, the inclination endures...
ET18 5.304 1
[England's] colonial policy, obeying the necessities of a vast
empire, has become liberal.
EWI 11.113 27
The colonial legislatures [in the West Indies] received the
act of Parliament with various degrees of displeasure...
War 11.163 12
The reference to any foreign register will inform us of the
number of thousand or million men that are now under arms in the vast
colonial system of the British Empire...
Colonies, Minister of the, n (1)
EWI 11.112 2
...in 1833, on the 14th May, Lord Stanley, Minister of the
Colonies, introduced into the House of Commons his bill for the
Emancipation.
colonies, n. (22)
Hist 2.30 18
Beside its primary value as the first chapter of the history of
Europe (the mythology thinly veiling authentic facts, the invention of the
mechanic arts and the migration of colonies,) [the story of Prometheus]
gives the history of religion...
ET4 5.67 14
...[the fair Saxon man] is moulded...for colleges, churches,
charities and colonies.
ET4 5.67 23
I apply to Britannia, queen of seas and colonies, the words in
which her latest novelist portrays his heroine; She is as mild as she is game,
and as game as she is mild.
ET5 5.97 15
Foreign power [in England] is kept by armed colonies;...
ET8 5.141 3
...if hereafter the war of races...should menace the English
civilization, these sea-kings may take once again to their floating castles
and find...a second millennium of power in their colonies.
ET8 5.141 18
Does the early history of each tribe show the permanent bias,
which...is masked as the tribe spreads its activity into colonies, commerce,
codes, arts, letters?
ET9 5.151 8
The English sway of their colonies has no root of kindness.
ET18 5.300 4
England, Scotland and Ireland combine to check the
[English] colonies.
CbW 6.258 23
Shakspeare wrote,--'T is said, best men are moulded of their
faults;/ and great educators and lawgivers, and especially generals and
leaders of colonies, mainly rely on this stuff...
Boks 7.203 22
...Pythagoras was...a planter of colonies...
HDC 11.57 19
This war [with the Niantic Indians] seems to have been
pressed by three of the colonies...
HDC 11.68 17
...We cannot possibly view with indifference the...endeavors
of the enemies of this...country, to rob us of those...rights, that we are
obliged to no power, under heaven, for the enjoyment of; as they are the
fruit of the heroic enterprises of the first settlers of these American colonies.
HDC 11.68 20
...we cannot but be alarmed at the great majority, in the
British parliament, for the imposition of unconstitutional taxes on the
colonies;...
HDC 11.69 1
Resolved, That these colonies have been and still are illegally
taxed by the British parliament...
EWI 11.111 2
There is no end to the tragic anecdotes in the municipal
records of the [West Indian] colonies.
EWI 11.113 8
...be it enacted...that from and after the first August, 1834,
slavery shall be and is hereby utterly and forever abolished and declared
unlawful throughout the British colonies...
EWI 11.113 11
The Ministers, having estimated the slave products of the
colonies...at 1,500,000 pounds per annum, estimated the total value of the
slave property [in the West Indies] at 30,000,000 pounds sterling...
EWI 11.113 18
The Ministers...proposed to give the [West Indian] planters,
as a compensation for so much of the slaves' time as the act [of
emancipation] took from them, 20,000,000 pounds sterling, to be divided
into nineteen shares for the nineteen colonies...
RBur 11.439 17
At the first announcement...that the 25th of January [1859]
was the hundredth anniversary of the birth of Robert Burns, a sudden
consent warmed the great English race, in all its kingdoms, colonies and
states...to keep the festival.
Bost 12.187 11
In...the farthest colonies...a middle-aged gentleman is just
embarking with all his property to fulfil the dream of his life and spend his
old age in Paris;...
Bost 12.189 1
A capital fact distinguishing this colony [Massachusetts Bay]
from all other colonies was that the persons composing it consented to
come on the one condition that the charter should be transferred from the
company in England to themselves;...
Bost 12.207 16
The Massachusetts colony grew...all the while sending out
colonies to every part of New England;...
Colonies, n. (2)
Edc1 10.125 10
We have already taken, at the planting of the Colonies...the
initial step...this, namely, that the poor man...is allowed to put his hand into
the pocket of the rich, and say, You shall educate me...
HDC 11.77 15
The cause of the Colonies was so much in [William
Emerson's] heart that he did not cease to make it the subject of his
preaching and his prayers...
Colonies, New England, n. (1)
HDC 11.57 15
In 1654, the four united New England Colonies agreed to
raise 270 foot and 40 horse, to reduce Ninigret, Sachem of the Niantics...
colonists, n. (3)
ET18 5.301 1
During the Australian emigration [from England], multitudes
were rejected by the commissioners as being too emaciated for useful
colonists.
HDC 11.44 1
The necessity of the colonists wrote the law.
HDC 11.55 21
...whilst many of the colonists at Boston thought to remove,
or did remove to England, the Concord people became uneasy, and looked
around for new seats.
colonization, n. (3)
ET4 5.45 26
The spawning force of the [English] race has sufficed to the
colonization of great parts of the world;...
ET18 5.303 7
...[Englishmen's] colonization annexes archipelagoes and
continents...
Chr2 10.118 3
The power that in other times inspired...the colonization of
New England...flies to the help of the deaf-mute and the blind...
Colonization, n. (1)
Hist 2.9 18
This life of ours is stuck round with...War, Colonization...as
with so many flowers...
Colonization Society, n. (1)
EWI 11.110 11
In 1821, according to official documents presented to the
American government by the Colonization Society, 200,000 slaves were
deported from Africa.
colonizationist, n. (1)
EzRy 10.389 18
[Ezra Ripley] was the easy dupe of any tonguey agent,
whether colonizationist or antipapist...who went by.
colonizations, n. (1)
CbW 6.251 13
All the marked events of our day...all the colonizations, may
be traced back to their origin in a private brain.
colonizes, v. (1)
Mrs1 3.120 18
...the salt, the dates, the ivory, and the gold, for which these
horrible regions are visited, find their way into...countries where man...
establishes a select society...which...colonizes every new-planted island...
colonizing, n. (1)
Bost 12.198 23
That colonizing [of New England] was a great and generous
scheme...
Colonna, Guido da, n. (1)
ShP 4.197 24
Chaucer, it seems, drew continually...from Guido di
Colonna...
Colonna, Vittoria, n. (2)
PC 8.216 25
...in [Michelangelo's] own days...you would need to hunt him
in a conventicle with the Methodists of the era, namely, Savonarola,
Vittoria Colonna...
MAng1 12.240 5
[Michelangelo] was deeply enamoured of the most
accomplished lady of the time, Vittoria Colonna...
colonnade, n. (6)
ET16 5.276 24
Stonehenge is a circular colonnade with a diameter of a
hundred feet...
ET16 5.276 26
Stonehenge is a circular colonnade...enclosing a second and
a third colonnade within.
ET16 5.283 3
On hints like these, Stukeley builds again the grand
colonnade [Stonehenge] into historic harmony...
ET16 5.286 2
The rule of art is that a colonnade is more beautiful the
longer it is...
Farm 7.147 15
...Nature drops a pine-cone in Mariposa, and it...grows in a
grove of giants, like a colonnade of Thebes.
PI 8.45 21
Architecture gives the like pleasure [of rhyme] by the repetition
of equal parts in a colonnade...
colonnades, n. (1)
SHC 11.431 5
A simultaneous movement has, in a hundred cities and
towns in this country, selected some convenient piece of undulating ground
with pleasant woods and waters;...and we lay the corpse in these leafy
colonnades.
colony, adj. (1)
HDC 11.54 25
...in 1640, when the colony rate was 1200 pounds, Concord
was assessed 50 pounds.
Colony, adj. (1)
CL 12.157 7
Can you bring home...the sedgy ripples of the old Colony
ponds?...
Colony, Massachusetts Bay, (2)
HDC 11.61 18
When the Dutch, or the French, or the English royalist
disagreed with the [Massachusetts Bay] Colony, there was always found a
Dutch, or French, or tory party,-an earnest minority,-to keep things from
extremity.
HDC 11.63 9
[Edward Bulkeley's] youngest brother, Peter, was deputy
from Concord, and was chosen speaker of the house of deputies in 1676.
The following year, he was sent to England...as agent for the Colony;...
colony, n. (27)
Con 1.295 9
The battle...of parent state and colony...reappears in all
countries and times.
Tran 1.359 15
Soon these improvements and mechanical inventions will be
superseded;...these cities rotted...all gone, like the shells which sprinkle the
sea-beach with a white colony to-day...
SwM 4.93 6
Among eminent persons, those who are most dear to men are
not of the class which the economist calls producers...they have not led out
a colony, nor invented a loom.
ET5 5.87 25
...Popery, Plymouth colony, American Revolution, are all
questions involving a yeoman's right to his dinner...
F 6.16 21
Detach a colony from the race, and it deteriorates to the crab.
Pow 6.57 20
Import into any stationary district...a colony of hardy
Yankees...and everything begins to shine with values.
Wth 6.110 22
The cost of education of the posterity of this great colony [of
immigrants], I will not compute.
Res 8.140 10
The marked events in history, as the emigration of a colony to
a new and more delightful coast; the building of a large ship;...each of these
events electrifies the tribe to which it befalls;...
PerF 10.77 20
Every valuable person who joins in an enterprise,-is it a
piece of industry, or the founding of a colony or a college...what he chiefly
brings...is...his thoughts...
LLNE 10.362 19
I recall one youth...I believe I must say the subtlest
observer and diviner of character I ever met, living, reading, writing,
talking there [at Brook Farm], perhaps as long as the colony held together;...
HDC 11.31 3
The best friend the Massachusetts colony had...was
Archbishop Laud in England.
HDC 11.43 5
[The Charter of the Company of Massachusetts Bay]...
ordered that all fundamental laws should be enacted by the freemen of the
colony.
HDC 11.43 10
...when, presently, the design of the [Massachusetts Bay]
colony began to fulfil itself, by the settlement of new plantations in the
vicinity of Boston...the Governor and freemen in Boston found it neither
desirable nor possible to control the trade and practices of these farmers.
HDC 11.50 13
About ten years after the planting of Concord, efforts began
to be made to civilize the Indians, and to win them to the knowledge of the
true God. This indeed, in so many words, is expressed in the charter of the
colony as one of its ends;...
HDC 11.55 4
In 1643, the colony was so numerous that it became
expedient to divide it into four counties, Concord being included in
Middlesex.
HDC 11.67 19
The planting of the [Massachusetts Bay] colony was the
effect of religious principle.
HDC 11.85 16
Every moment carries us farther from the two great epochs
of public principle, the Planting, and the Revolution of the colony [of
Massachusetts Bay].
EWI 11.112 24
...Be it enacted, that all and every person who, on the first
August, 1834, shall be holden in slavery within any such British colony as
aforesaid, shall upon and from and after the said first August, become and
be to all intents and purposes free...
War 11.165 11
...when a truth appears...it will plant a colony, a state,
nations and half a globe full of men.
Bost 12.188 26
A capital fact distinguishing this colony [Massachusetts
Bay] from all other colonies was that the persons composing it consented to
come on the one condition that the charter should be transferred from the
company in England to themselves;...
Bost 12.189 21
John Smith writes (1624): Of all the four parts of the world
that I have yet seen not inhabited, could I but have means to transplant a
colony, I would rather live here [in New England] than anywhere;...
Bost 12.190 10
...Dr. Mather writes of [Boston], The town hath indeed
three elder Sisters in this colony, but it hath wonderfully outgrown them
all...
Bost 12.191 5
The colony of 1620 had landed at Plymouth.
Bost 12.191 11
...the weariness of the sea, the shrinking from cold weather
and the pangs of hunger must justify [the Plymouth colonists]. But the next
colony planted itself at Salem...
Bost 12.195 10
The [Massachusetts] colony was planted in 1620; in 1638
Harvard College was founded.
Bost 12.201 10
The future historian will regard the detachment of the
Puritans without aristocracy the supreme fortune of the colony;...
Bost 12.207 13
The Massachusetts colony grew and filled its own borders
with a denser population than any other American State...
color, n. (65)
Nat 1.15 8
...the primary forms...give us...a pleasure arising from outline,
color, motion, and grouping.
Nat 1.40 20
Therefore is nature glorious with form, color, and motion; that
every globe in the remotest heaven...shall hint or thunder to man the laws of
right and wrong...
Nat 1.68 12
Nor has science sufficient humanity, so long as the naturalist
overlooks that wonderful congruity which subsists between man and the
world; of which he is lord...because he...finds something of himself...in
every new law of color...
AmS 1.105 15
They are the kings of the world who give the color of their
present thought to all nature and all art...
LT 1.265 17
Could we indicate the indicators...we should have a series of
sketches which would report to the next ages the color and quality of ours.
Hist 2.12 15
Some men classify objects by color and size and other
accidents of appearance;...
SR 2.57 14
...when the devout motions of the soul come, yield to them
heart and life, though they should clothe God with shape and color.
Hsm1 2.245 5
In the elder English dramatists...there is a constant
recognition of gentility, as if a noble behavior were as easily marked in the
society of their age as color is in our American population.
OS 2.290 19
The more cultivated, in their account of their own experience,
cull out the pleasing, poetic circumstance...and so seek to throw a romantic
color over their life.
Art1 2.355 5
This...power to fix the momentary eminency of an object...the
painter and sculptor exhibit in color and in stone.
Art1 2.356 26
...painting teaches me the splendor of color...
Art1 2.360 27
...in my younger days...I fancied the great pictures would
be...some surprising combination of color and form;...
Pt1 3.3 12
[The umpires of tastes'] knowledge of the fine arts is...some
limited judgment of color or form...
Pt1 3.34 9
The poet did not stop at the color or the form, but read their
meaning;...
Exp 3.53 6
...[physicians] esteem each man the victim of another, who...by
such cheap signboards as the color of his beard or the slope of his occiput,
reads the inventory of his fortunes and character.
Exp 3.79 23
Thus inevitably does the universe wear our color...
Chr1 3.91 26
The constituency at home hearkens to [men of characters']
words, watches the color of their cheek...
MoS 4.166 4
Here is an impatience and fastidiousness at color or pretence
of any kind.
GoW 4.275 21
...[Goethe]...considered that every color was the mixture of
light and darkness in new proportions.
ET1 5.6 22
Here is my [Greenough's] theory of structure...an emphasis of
features proportioned to their gradated importance in function; color and
ornament to be decided and arranged and varied by strictly organic laws...
ET3 5.39 16
The only drawback on this industrial conveniency [in
England] is the darkness of its sky. The night and day are too nearly of a
color.
ET3 5.39 20
In the manufacturing towns [of England], the fine soot or
blacks...give white sheep the color of black sheep...
ET8 5.135 16
Here [in England] was lately a cross-grained miser [Joseph
Turner]...yet as true a worshipper of beauty in form and color as ever
existed...
ET12 5.211 2
In seeing these youths [at Oxford] I believed I saw already an
advantage in vigor and color and general habit, over their contemporaries in
the American colleges.
ET14 5.257 16
Color, like the dawn, flows over the horizon from
[Tennyson's] pencil...
Ctr 6.154 13
To a man at work, the frost is but a color;...
Wsp 6.221 14
Law it is, which is without name, or color, or hands, or feet;...
Bty 6.294 17
There is a compelling reason in the uses of the plant for every
novelty of color or form;...
Bty 6.305 11
...when the second-sight of the mind is opened, now one color
or form or gesture, and now another, has a pungency...
SS 7.4 23
All [my new friend] wished of his tailor was to provide that sober
mean of color and cut which would never detain the eye for a moment.
Elo1 7.93 23
Eloquence must be grounded on the plainest narrative.
Afterwards, it may warm itself until it exhales symbols of every kind and
color...
WD 7.168 20
Any holiday communicates to us its color.
Suc 7.300 8
The world is not made up to the eye of figures, that is, only
half; it is also made of color.
Suc 7.300 13
...beyond color [Nature] cannot go.
Suc 7.300 15
If thought is form, sentiment is color.
Suc 7.302 13
This sensibility appears...in the power which form and color
exert upon the soul;...
OA 7.318 10
If, on a winter day, you should stand within a bell-glass, the
face and color of the afternoon clouds would not indicate whether it were
June or January;...
PI 8.9 3
The laws of light and of heat translate each other;--so do the laws
of sound and of color;...
PI 8.29 11
Fancy is related to color; imagination, to form.
PI 8.32 20
We are dazzled at first by new words and brilliancy of color...
PI 8.72 15
The problem of the poet is...to give the pleasure of color, and be
not less the most powerful of sculptors.
Elo2 8.127 4
Something which any boy would tell with color and vivacity
[some men] can only stammer out with hard literalness...
QO 8.175 3
The snowflake that is now falling is marked by both [old and
new]. The present moment gives the motion and the color of the flake,
Antiquity its form and properties.
PPo 8.244 7
Here is a poem on a melon, by Adsched of Meru:-Color,
taste and smell, smaragdus, sugar and musk,/ Amber for the tongue, for the
eye a picture rare,/ If you cut the fruit in slices, every slice a crescent fair,/
If you leave it whole, the full harvest moon is there./
Insp 8.296 10
...now one, now another landscape, form, color, or
companion...strikes the electric chain with which we are darkly bound...
PerF 10.80 2
The geometer shows us the true order in figures; the painter
in laws of color;...
Supl 10.168 21
[The old head thinks] I will be as moderate as the fact, and
will use the same expression, without color, which I received;...
LLNE 10.359 7
...if one must study all the strokes to be laid, all the faults
to be shunned in a building or work of art, of...its site, its color, there would
be no end.
HDC 11.64 15
The public charity seems to have been bestowed in a
manner now obsolete [in Concord]. The town...being informed of the great
present want of Thomas Pellit, gave order to Stephen Hosmer to deliver a
town cow, of a black color, with a white face, unto said Pellit, for his
present supply.
EWI 11.121 11
All disqualifications and distinctions of color have ceased
[in Jamaica];...
EWI 11.121 16
...every man's position [in Jamaica] is settled by the same
circumstances which regulate that point in other free countries, where no
difference of color exists.
EWI 11.144 20
The intellect,-that is miraculous! Who has it, has the
talisman: his skin and bones, though they were the color of night, are
transparent...
FSLC 11.187 4
It is remarkable how rare in the history of tyrants is an
immoral law. Some color, some indirection was always used.
Scot 11.464 22
[Scott] made no pretension to the lofty style of Spenser, or
Milton, or Wordsworth. Compared with their purified songs, purified of all
ephemeral color or material, his were vers de societe.
PLT 12.63 20
The superiority of the man is...that he...looks straight at the
pure fact, with no color of option.
Mem 12.91 24
Once [the active mind] joined its facts by color and form
and sensuous relations.
CL 12.152 14
The leaf in our dry climate gets fully ripe, and...acquires fine
color...
CL 12.158 8
My companion and I remarked from the hilltop the prevailing
sobriety of color...
CW 12.170 7
The gentle deities/ Showed me the love of color and of
sounds,/...
MAng1 12.220 19
Granacci, a painter's apprentice, having lent
[Michelangelo], when a boy, a print of Saint Antony beaten by devils,
together with some colors and pencils, he went to the fish-market to
observe the form and color of fins and of the eyes of fish.
MAng1 12.223 8
The love of beauty which never passes beyond outline
and color was too slight an object to occupy the powers of [Michelangelo's]
genius.
ACri 12.300 9
The power of the poet is...in measuring his strength by the
facility with which he makes the mood of mind give its color to things.
ACri 12.302 13
[Channing] is the April day incarnated and walking...
painting all things its own color.
MLit 12.324 9
With the sharpest eye for form, color, botany...[Goethe]
never stopped at surface...
PPr 12.387 15
...[each age's] limitation assumes the poetic form of a
beautiful superstition, as the dimness of our sight clothes the objects in the
horizon with mist and color.
color-bags, n. (1)
Art1 2.367 10
[Now men] abhor men as tasteless, dull, and inconvertible,
and console themselves with color-bags and blocks of marble.
color-bearer, n. (1)
SMC 11.369 6
[George Prescott writes] Our colors had several holes made,
and were badly torn. One bullet hit the staff which the bearer had in his
hand. The color-bearer is brave as a lion;...
colored, adj. (10)
Nat 1.15 14
...perspective is produced, which integrates every mass of
objects...into a well colored and shaded globe...
Nat 1.49 26
Until this higher agency intervened, the animal eye sees...sharp
outlines and colored surfaces.
Int 2.326 8
Heraclitus looked upon the affections as dense and colored
mists.
Exp 3.75 25
...we have no means of correcting these colored and distorting
lenses which we are...
CbW 6.265 17
I know those miserable fellows...who see a black star
always riding through the light and colored clouds in the sky overhead;...
Elo1 7.68 25
...listen to a poor Irishwoman recounting some experience of
hers. Her speech flows like a river...such justice done to all the parts! It is a
true transubstantiation,--the fact converted into speech, all warm and
colored and alive...
GSt 10.503 13
In 1863 [George Stearns] began to recruit colored soldiers in
Buffalo...
EWI 11.142 13
The recent testimonies...of Gurney, of Philippo, are very
explicit on this point, the capacity and the success of the colored and the
black population [in the West Indies]...
JBS 11.278 16
...the colored boy had no friend, and no future.
Wom 11.412 15
[Women] emit from their pores a colored atmosphere...
colored, v. (5)
Tran 1.340 20
...the tendency to respect the intuitions and to give them, at
least in our creed, all authority over our experience, has deeply colored the
conversation and poetry of the present day;...
Chr1 3.94 15
How often has the influence of a true master realized all the
tales of magic! A river of command seemed to run down from his eyes into
all those who beheld him...which pervaded them with his thoughts and
colored all events with the hue of his mind.
Prch 10.233 2
Our children will be here, if we are not; and their children's
history will be colored by our action.
MMEm 10.424 14
...in the weary womb [of Time] are prolific numbers of
the same sad hour, colored by the memory of defeats in virtue...
MLit 12.318 21
This feeling of the Infinite has deeply colored the poetry of
the period.
coloring, adj. (1)
PLT 12.22 17
If we go through...any cabinet where is some representation
of all the kingdoms of Nature...we feel as if looking at our bone and flesh
through coloring and distorting glasses.
coloring, n. (4)
OS 2.289 1
[Homer, Chaucer, Spenser, Shakspeare, Milton] seem frigid
and phlegmatic to those who have been spiced with the frantic passion and
violent coloring of inferior but popular writers.
Art1 2.357 13
As picture teaches the coloring, so sculpture the anatomy of
form.
MAng1 12.230 15
Slighting the secondary arts of coloring, and all the aids
of graceful finish, [Michelangelo] aimed exclusively [in the Sistine Chapel
ceiling frescoes], as a stern designer, to express the vigor and magnificence
of his conceptions.
MLit 12.325 8
It was with [Goethe] a favorite task to find a theory of every
institution, custom, art, work of art, which he observed. Witness his
explanation...of the coloring of Titian and Paul Veronese...
colors, n. (47)
Nat 1.11 12
Nature always wears the colors of the spirit.
Nat 1.22 19
The intellect searches out the absolute order of things...without
the colors of affection.
Nat 1.44 1
In Haydn's oratorios, the notes present to the imagination not
only motions...but colors also;...
Nat 1.44 3
The law of harmonic sounds reappears in the harmonic colors.
MN 1.206 18
...when the genius comes...it is...the power of transferring the
affair in the street into oils and colors.
Hist 2.20 21
In the woods in a winter afternoon one will see as readily the
origin of the stained glass window...in the colors of the western sky seen
through the bare and crossing branches of the forest.
SR 2.66 23
Time and space are but physiological colors which the eye
makes...
Comp 2.116 22
...the royal armies sent against Napoleon, when he
approached cast down their colors and from enemies became friends...
OS 2.271 20
Language cannot paint [this pure nature] with [man's] colors.
Int 2.337 25
...the mystic pencil wherewith we...draw [in unconscious
states]...can design well and group well;...its colors are well laid on...
Pt1 3.33 4
...how mean to study, when an emotion communicates to the
intellect the power to sap and upheave nature; how great the perspective!
nations, times, systems, enter and disappear like threads in tapestry of large
figure and many colors;...
Exp 3.57 6
A man is like a bit of Labrador spar, which has no lustre as you
turn it in your hand until you come to a particular angle; then it shows deep
and beautiful colors.
Nat2 3.176 13
The uprolled clouds and the colors of morning and evening
will transfigure maples and alders.
NR 3.233 14
I read Proclus...for a mechanical help to the fancy and the
imagination. I read for the lustres, as if one should use a fine picture in a
chromatic experiment, for its rich colors.
PNR 4.89 6
All [Plato's] painting in the Republic must be esteemed
mythical, with intent to bring out, sometimes in violent colors, his thought.
MoS 4.150 25
The genius is a genius by the first look he casts on any
object. Is his eye creative? Does he not rest in angles and colors, but
beholds the design?--he will presently undervalue the actual object.
ShP 4.217 7
Shakspeare employed [the things of nature] as colors to
compose his picture.
GoW 4.275 20
In optics again [Goethe] rejected the artificial theory of
seven colors...
ET19 5.312 27
Is it not true, sir, that the wise ancients did not praise the
ship parting with flying colors from the port...
Ctr 6.163 12
[The ancients] preferred the noble vessel...dismantled and
unrigged, to her companion borne into harbor with colors flying and guns
firing.
Wsp 6.221 23
...the colors are fast, because they are the native colors of the
fleece;...
Wsp 6.221 24
...the colors are fast, because they are the native colors of the
fleece;...
Bty 6.290 1
...the forms and colors of nature have a new charm for us in our
perception that not one ornament was added for ornament...
Ill 6.317 3
...if...Moosehead, or any other, invent a new style or mythology,
I fancy that the world will be all brave and right if dressed in these colors...
Art2 7.44 8
In painting, bright colors stimulate the eye before yet they are
harmonized into a landscape.
Art2 7.45 3
A very coarse imitation of the human form on canvas, or in
wax-work; a coarse sketch in colors of a landscape...these things give to
unpractised eyes...almost as much pleasure as a statue of Canova or a
picture of Titian.
Art2 7.53 2
The plumage of the bird...has a reaon for its rich colors in the
constitution of the animal.
Farm 7.148 4
In September, when the pears hang heaviest and are taking
from the sun their gay colors, comes usually a gusty day which...throws
down the heaviest fruit in bruised heaps.
Suc 7.309 3
Nature lays the ground-plan of each creature accurately...then
veils it scrupulously. See how carefully she covers up the skeleton. ... She
weaves her tissues and integuments of flesh and skin and hair and beautiful
colors of the day over it...
PPo 8.262 18
A painter in China once painted a hall;/ Such a web never
hung on an emperor's wall;-/ One half from his brush with rich colors did
run,/ The other he touched with a beam of the sun;/...
PPo 8.262 25
In thee, friend, that Tyrian chamber is found;/ Thine the star-pointing-
roof, and the base on the ground:/ Is one half depicted with colors
less bright?/ Beware that the counterpart blazes with light!/
Imtl 8.327 26
Swedenborg...announced many things true and admirable,
though always clothed in somewhat sad and Stygian colors.
Chr2 10.105 4
We use in our idlest poetry and discourse the words Jove,
Neptune, Mercury, as mere colors...
Schr 10.280 20
Society...is dazzled and deceived by the weapon [of talent],
without inquiring into the cause for which it is drawn; like boys by the
drums and colors of the troops.
EWI 11.121 11
...men of all colors have equal rights in law [in Jamaica]...
SMC 11.353 9
Every Democrat who went South came back a Republican,
like the governors who...went to Kansas, and instantly took the free-state
colors.
SMC 11.369 4
[George Prescott writes] Our colors had several holes made,
and were badly torn.
Wom 11.411 19
Society...colors, forms, are [women's] homes and
attendants.
PLT 12.16 15
In my thought I seem to stand on the bank of a river and
watch the endless flow of the stream, floating objects of all shapes, colors
and natures;...
Mem 12.93 13
There is no book like the memory, none with such a good
index, and that of every kind...arranged...by colors, tastes, smells, shapes...
CL 12.151 9
...the oak and maple are red with the same colors on the new
leaf which they will resume in autumn when it is ripe.
CL 12.152 7
The forest in its coat of many colors reflects its varied
splendor through the softest haze.
Bost 12.184 2
...Sir Erskine Perry says the usage and opinion of the
Hindoos so invades men of all castes and colors who deal with them that all
take a Hindoo tint.
MAng1 12.220 17
Granacci, a painter's apprentice, having lent
[Michelangelo], when a boy, a print of Saint Antony beaten by devils,
together with some colors and pencils, he went to the fish-market to
observe the form and color of fins and of the eyes of fish.
MAng1 12.227 17
...in painting, [Michelangelo] not only mixed but ground
his colors himself...
ACri 12.283 17
...Heaven, Hell, power, science, the Neant, exist to [the
writer] as colors for his brush.
MLit 12.332 4
That Goethe had not a moral perception proportionate to his
other powers is not...merely a circumstance, as we might relate of a man
that he had or had not...an eye for colors...
Colors, Theory of [Goethe], (1)
GoW 4.287 3
[Goethe's] Daily and Yearly Journal...and the historical part
of his Theory of Colors, have the same interest.
colors, v. (2)
LT 1.280 16
I am not mortified by our vice;...it colors and palters...and I
can see to the end of it;...
Ill 6.312 16
In the life of the dreariest alderman, fancy enters into all details
and colors them with rosy hue.
colossal, adj. (20)
Hist 2.19 26
The custom of making houses and tombs in the living rock,
says Heeren...determined very naturally the principal character of the
Nubian Egyptian architecture to the colossal form which it assumed.
SR 2.63 11
[The world] has been taught by this colossal symbol [of kings]
the mutual reverence that is due from man to man.
SR 2.83 24
There is at this moment for you an utterance brave and grand as
that of the colossal chisel of Phidias...
SL 2.148 14
As in dreams, so in the scarcely less fluid events of the world
every man sees himself in colossal...
Pt1 3.37 13
Dante's praise is that he dared to write his autobiography in
colossal cipher...
Pol1 3.214 16
This undertaking for another is the blunder which stands in
colossal ugliness in the governments of the world.
UGM 4.4 21
Our colossal theologies of Judaism, Christism...are the
necessary and structural action of the human mind.
SwM 4.102 17
A colossal soul, [Swedenborg] lies vast abroad on his
times...
GoW 4.270 13
...[the nineteenth century's] poet, is Goethe, a man quite
domesticated in the century...taking away by his colossal parts the reproach
of weakness which but for him would lie on the intellectual works of the
period.
ET1 5.5 21
[Greenough's] face was so handsome and his person so well
formed that he might be pardoned, if, as was alleged, the face of his Medora
and the figure of a colossal Achilles in clay, were idealizations of his own.
ET15 5.271 22
[The London Times] is a living index of the colossal British
power.
F 6.42 13
As once [man] found himself among toys, so now he plays a part
in colossal systems...
Farm 7.142 14
[The farmer's] machine is of colossal proportions;...
PI 8.47 20
The fact is made conspicuous, nay, colossal, by this simple
rhetoric [of iterations of phrase]...
Res 8.139 5
Our Copernican globe is a great factory or shop of power, with
its rotating constellations, times and tides. The machine is of colossal size;...
FSLC 11.210 12
...grant that the heart of financiers...shrinks within them at
these colossal amounts, and the embarrassments which complicate the
problem [abolition];...
EdAd 11.385 8
One would say there is nothing colossal in the country but
its geography and its material activities;...
Shak1 11.452 17
...Shakspeare...simply by his colossal proportions, dwarfs
the geniuses of Elizabeth...
MAng1 12.229 15
[Michelangelo's Moses] is a sitting statue of colossal
size...
Let 12.404 3
Apathies and total want of work...never will obtain any
sympathy if there is...an unweeded patch in the garden; not to mention the
graver absurdity of a youth of noble aims who can find no field for his
energies, whilst the colossal wrongs of the Indian, of the Negro, of the
emigrant, remain unmitigated...
colossal, n. (1)
LT 1.261 22
...Dante and Milton painted in colossal their platoons, and
called them Heaven and Hell.
colossalized, v. (1)
QO 8.197 21
...James Hogg...is but a third-rate author, owing his fame to
his effigy colossalized through the lens of John Wilson...
colossally, adv. (2)
Nat 1.71 24
[Man] sees that the structure still fits him, but fits him
colossally.
CL 12.165 10
...Nature is only a mirror in which man is reflected colossally.
colossi, n. (1)
Bhr 6.190 3
Under the humblest roof, the commonest person in plain
clothes sits there massive, cheerful, yet formidable, like the Egyptian
colossi.
Colossi, n. (1)
Hist 2.20 7
What would...neat porches and wings have been, associated
with those gigantic halls before which only Colossi could sit as watchmen...
colossus, n. (1)
LT 1.260 18
...all the children of men attack the colossus [Conservatism] in
their youth...
Colossus, n. (1)
Hsm1 2.258 25
...[many extraordinary young men] enter an active
profession and the forming Colossus shrinks to the common size of man.
Colquhoun's, John C., n. (1)
Dem1 10.24 10
Read demonology or Colquhoun's Report, and we are
bewildered...
Columbia, n. (2)
EdAd 11.387 22
Bad as it is, this freedom [in America] leads onward and
upward,-to a Columbia of thought and art...
Bost 12.200 27
There is a Columbia of thought and art and character...
Columbus, Christopher, n. (27)
Nat 1.20 27
When the bark of Columbus nears the shore of America;...can
we separate the man from the living picture?
YA 1.365 15
Columbus alleged as a reason for seeking a continent in the
West, that the harmony of nature required a great tract of land in the
western hemisphere...
Hist 2.37 7
Columbus needs a planet to shape his course upon.
SR 2.86 20
Columbus found the New World in an undecked boat.
Hsm1 2.258 10
The pictures which fill the imagination in reading the
actions of...Columbus...teach us how needlessly mean our life is;...
Exp 3.80 1
Hermes, Cadmus, Columbus, Newton, Bonaparte, are the mind'
s ministers.
Exp 3.80 25
What imports it whether it is...Columbus and America...or
puss with her tail?
UGM 4.12 18
Every ship that comes to America got its chart from
Columbus.
PNR 4.80 22
It seems as if nature, in regarding the geologic night behind
her, when, in five or six millenniums, she had turned out five or six men, as
Homer, Phidias, Menu and Columbus, was no wise discontented with the
result.
GoW 4.270 21
[Goethe] appears at a time...when, in the absence of heroic
characters, a social comfort and cooperation have come in. There is...no
Columbus, but hundreds of post-captains...
ET9 5.152 23
Amerigo Vespucci, the pickle-dealer at Seville...managed in
this lying world to supplant Columbus...
F 6.38 7
Of what changes then in sky and earth, and in finer skies and
earths, does the appearance of some Dante or Columbus apprise us!
F 6.39 8
Dante and Columbus were Italians, in their time;...
Wth 6.93 16
Columbus thinks that the sphere is a problem for practical
navigation as well as for closet geometry...
Ill 6.318 6
The red men told Columbus they had an herb which took away
fatigue;...
SS 7.7 23
Columbus discovered no isle or key so lonely as himself.
Art2 7.52 15
Raphael paints wisdom...Columbus sails it...
Elo1 7.82 18
The audience [if there be personality in the orator]...follows
like a child its preceptor, and hears what he has to say. It is as if, amidst the
king's council at Madrid...Columbus, being introduced, was interrogated
whether his geographical knowledge could aid the cabinet;...
Boks 7.206 11
Ximenes, Columbus...are [Charles V's] contemporaries.
Suc 7.285 8
Columbus at Veragua found plenty of gold;...
Res 8.137 11
...whether searched by the plough of Adam...the boat of
Columbus...or the submarine telegraph,--to every one of these experiments
[the earth] makes a gracious response.
Edc1 10.131 25
...[man] is to be the stalwart...Columbus...of the physic,
metaphysic and ethics of the design of the world.
Edc1 10.156 12
Talk of Columbus and Newton! I tell you the child just
born in yonder hovel is the beginning of a revolution as great as theirs.
MoL 10.248 18
You [scholars] are here as the carriers of the power of
Nature...as Columbus, with America in his log-book;...
War 11.165 6
...when a truth appears,-as, for instance, a perception in the
wit of one Columbus that there is land in the Western Sea...it will build
ships;...
FSLC 11.209 9
'T is said [buying the slaves] will cost two thousand
millions of dollars. Was there ever any contribution that was so
enthusiastically paid as this will be? ... The father of his country shall wait,
well pleased, a little longer for his monument;...and the patient Columbus
for his.
FRep 11.537 7
Columbus was no backward-creeping crab...
Columbus's, Christopher, n. (3)
QO 8.185 11
Columbus's egg is claimed for Brunelleschi.
EdAd 11.387 23
Bad as it is, this freedom [in America] leads onward and
upward,-to a Columbia of thought and art, which is the last and endless
end of Columbus's adventure.
Bost 12.201 2
There is a Columbia of thought and art and character, which
is the last and endless sequel of Columbus's adventure.
column, n. (10)
SR 2.89 8
...thou only firm column must presently appear the upholder of
all that surrounds thee.
Prd1 2.239 16
...in the flow of wit and love roll out your paradoxes, in
solid column...
Int 2.344 13
...a capillary column of water is a balance for the sea.
NER 3.271 22
The Iliad...the Doric column...when they are ended, the
master casts behind him.
NER 3.280 10
The familiar experiment called the hydrostatic paradox, in
which a capillary column of water balances the ocean, is a symbol of the
relation of one man to the whole family of men.
SwM 4.108 6
At the top of the column [the spine] [Nature] puts out another
spine...
SwM 4.131 17
[Swedenborg] was let down through a column that seemed
of brass...
ET5 5.85 25
[The Englishmen's] military science propounds that if the
weight of the advancing column is greater than that of the resisting, the
latter is destroyed.
ET14 5.237 8
...the Greek art wrought many a vase or column, in which too
long or too lithe, or nodes, or pits and flaws are made a beauty of;...
PerF 10.70 13
...the marble column, the brazen statue burn under the
daylight...
columnar, adj. (4)
Con 1.300 24
...the solid columnar stem, which lifts that bank of foliage
into the air...is the gift and legacy of dead and buried years.
Chr1 3.109 3
We require that a man should be so large and columnar in the
landscape, that it should deserve to be recorded that he arose, and girded up
his loins, and departed to such a place.
Bhr 6.185 14
In the shallow company, easily excited, easily tired, here is
the columnar Bernard;...
PLT 12.55 4
The natural remedy against...this desultory universality of
ours, this immense ground-juniper falling abroad and not gathered up into
any columnar tree, is to substitute realism for sentimentalism;...
columns, n. (16)
LE 1.169 5
...the deep, echoing, aboriginal woods, where the living
columns of the oak and fir tower up...this beauty...has never been recorded
by art...
Comp 2.115 12
...the doctrine...that it is impossible to get anything without
its price,--is not less sublime in the columns of a leger than in the budgets
of states...
NER 3.255 20
...the motto of the Globe newspaper is so attractive to me
that I can seldom find much appetite to read what is below it in its
columns...
GoW 4.281 3
...in all these countries [England, America and France], men
of talent write from talent. It is enough if...the taste [is] propitiated,--so
many columns, so many hours, filled in a lively and creditable way.
ET15 5.267 19
The daily paper [London Times] is the work...chiefly, it is
said, of young men recently from the University, and perhaps reading law
in chambers in London. Hence the academic elegance and classic allusion
which adorns its columns.
ET15 5.269 1
When I see [the English] reading [the London Times's]
columns, they seem to me becoming every moment more British.
ET15 5.269 14
There is an air of freedom even in [the London Times's]
advertising columns...
ET16 5.283 14
I chanced to see, a year ago, men at work on the
substructure of a house in Bowdoin Square, in Boston, swinging a block of
granite of the size of the largest of the Stonehenge columns...
Bty 6.291 5
...our taste in building...refuses pilasters and columns that
support nothing...
Bty 6.294 21
...our art...reaches beauty by taking every superfluous ounce
that can be spared from a wall, and keeping all its strength in the poetry of
columns.
PI 8.64 10
Bring us...poetry which, like the verses inscribed on Balder's
columns in Breidablik, is capable of restoring the dead to life;...
QO 8.187 21
...if we learn how old are...the capitals of our columns...we
shall think very well of the first men, or ill of the latest.
SovE 10.181 3
These rules were writ in human heart/ By Him who built the
day;/ The columns of the universe/ Not firmer based than they./
EzRy 10.389 15
...[Ezra Ripley] knew nothing beyond the columns of his
weekly religious newspaper, the tracts of his sect, and perhap the Middlesex
Yeoman.
FSLC 11.181 20
The panic [over the Fugitive Slave Law] has paralyzed the
journals...so that one cannot open a newspaper without being disgusted by
new records of shame. I cannot read longer even the local good news.
When I look down the columns at the titles of paragraphs...what bitter
mockeries!
ACri 12.291 6
In architecture the beauty is increased in the degree in which
the material is safely diminished; as when you break up a prose wall, and
leave all the strength in the poetry of columns.
comatose, adj. (2)
Ill 6.322 15
Like sick men in hospitals, we change only from bed to bed,
from one folly to another; and it cannot signify much what becomes of
such...wailing, stupid, comatose creatures...
ACiv 11.300 22
[People] bring their opinion [of slavery] into the world. If
they have a comatose tendency in the brain, they are pro-slavery while they
live;...
comb, n. (1)
Comc 8.171 27
Lord C., said the Countess of Gordon, O, he is a perfect
comb, all teeth and back.
comb, v. (1)
ET4 5.62 10
It took many generations to trim and comb and perfume the
first boat-load of Norse pirates into royal highnesses...
combat, n. (5)
Hist 2.15 7
...we have [the Greek national mind expressed] once again in
sculpture...a multitude of forms...like votaries performing some religious
dance before the gods, and, though in convulsive pain or mortal combat,
never daring to break the figure and decorum of their dance.
ET14 5.250 10
...where impatience of the tricks of men...builds altars to the
negative Deity, the inevitable recoil is...the gallantry of the private heart,
which decks its immolation with glory, in the unequal combat of will
against fate.
Elo1 7.99 24
[Eloquence's] great masters...resembling the Arabian warrior
of fame, who wore seventeen weapons in his belt, and in personal combat
used them all occasionally.--yet subordinated all means;...
PPo 8.239 24
Such [amatory] verses...will drive [Persian] warriors to the
combat...
FRep 11.515 17
When the cannon is aimed by ideas...when men die for
what they live for...then gods join in the combat;...and the better code of
laws at last records the victory.
combat, v. (2)
AmS 1.107 10
[The poor and the low]...will perish to add one drop of blood
to make...those giant sinews combat and conquer.
FRep 11.539 13
It is not by heads reverted...to George Washington, that
you can combat the dangers and dragons that beset the United States at this
time.
combatants, n. (5)
Tran 1.348 23
...the good and wise must...carry salvation to the combatants
and demagogues in the dusty arena below.
ET5 5.87 4
...[the English]...do not like ponderous and difficult tactics, but
delight to bring the affair hand to hand; where the victory lies with the
strength, courage and endurance of the individual combatants.
Elo2 8.111 15
Who knows before the debate begins...what the means are of
the combatants?
EPro 11.323 5
[The Civil War] might have begun otherwise or elsewhere,
but war was in the minds and bones of the combatants...
FRep 11.515 1
There have been revolutions which were not in the interest
of feudalism and barbarism, but in that of society. And these are
distinguished not by the numbers of the combatants nor the numbers of the
slain, but by the motive.
combated, v. (2)
ET14 5.249 26
[Carlyle] saw little difference in the gladiators, or the
causes for which they combated;...
DL 7.125 5
In each the circumstance signalized differs, but in each it is
made the coals of an ever-burning egotism. In one, it was his going to sea;
in a second, the difficulties he combated in going to college;...
combats, n. (1)
LE 1.168 6
...the fall of swarms of flies, in autumn, from combats high in
the air...the angry hiss of the wood-birds;...all, are alike unattempted [by
poets].
combattre, v. (1)
FSLN 11.237 6
...Tout est soldat pour vous combattre.
combed, v. (2)
ET3 5.34 9
...[English] fields have been combed and rolled till they appear
to have been finished with a pencil instead of a plough.
Insp 8.270 10
They combed [the aboriginal man's] mane, they pared his
nails...before he could begin to write his sad story...
Combe's, George, n. (1)
LLNE 10.339 1
The popularity of Combe's Constitution of Man;...was all
on the side of the people.
combination, n. (31)
Nat 1.19 25
The high and divine beauty...is that which is found in
combination with the human will.
Nat 1.37 1
Our dealing with sensible objects is a constant exercise in the
necessary lessons...of combination to one end of manifold forces.
DSA 1.149 15
...then, when the dead began to fall in ranks around him,
awoke [Massena's] powers of combination...
LE 1.180 27
Let the scholar appreciate this combination of gifts...
LT 1.281 9
...by combination of that which is dead [the reformers] hope to
make something alive.
YA 1.377 27
[Trade] displaces physical strength, and instals computation,
combination, information, science, in its room.
Hist 2.15 23
Nature is an endless combination and repetition of a very few
laws.
Lov1 2.186 15
...as life wears on, it proves a game of permutation and
combination of all possible positions of the parties...
Art1 2.360 27
...in my younger days...I fancied the great pictures would
be...some surprising combination of color and form;...
Pt1 3.38 7
If I have not found that excellent combination of gifts in my
countrymen which I seek, neither could I aid myself to fix the idea of the
poet by reading now and then in Chalmers's collection of five centuries of
English poets.
Chr1 3.93 18
I see [in the natural merchant], with the pride of art and skill
of masterly arithmetic and power of remote combination, the consciousness
of being an agent and playfellow of the original laws of the world.
UGM 4.16 25
We go to the gymnasium and the swimming-school to see
the power and beauty of the body; there is the like pleasure and a higher
benefit from witnessing intellectual feats of all kinds; as feats...of
mathematical combination...
SwM 4.130 16
Success, or a fortunate genius, seems to depend...on a due
proportion...of moral and mental power, which perhaps obeys the law of
those chemical ratios which make a proportion in volumes necessary to
combination...
ET4 5.49 3
Trades and professions carve their own lines on face and form.
Certain circumstances of English life are not less effective; as...readiness of
combination among themselves for politics or for business;...
ET15 5.267 14
[The London Times's] consummate discretion and success
exhibit the English skill of combination.
Art2 7.39 4
...Art is the spirit's voluntary use and combination of things to
serve its end.
Cour 7.254 12
Men admire...the power of better combination and
foresight...
Suc 7.298 2
Now it costs a rare combination of clouds and lights to
overcome the common and mean.
Comc 8.167 9
I have been employed, [Camper] says, six months on the
Cetacea; I understand the osteology of the head of all these monsters, and
have made the combination with the human head so well that everybody
now appears to me narwhale, porpoise or marsouins.
PerF 10.80 3
Bonaparte, with his celerity of combination...reads the
geography of Europe as if his eyes were telescopes;...
SovE 10.186 21
All forces are found in Nature united with that which they
move...light is not massed aloof, nor electricity, nor gravity, but they are
always in combination.
Schr 10.277 7
These shrewd faculties belong to man. I love...to see them
trained:...the craft of mathematical combination...
Thor 10.451 5
[Thoreau's] character exhibited occasional traits drawn from
this [French] blood, in singular combination with a very strong Saxon
genius.
Thor 10.479 19
The tendency...to read all the laws of Nature in the one
object or one combination under your eye, is...comic to those who do not
share the philosopher's perception of identity.
FSLC 11.184 5
What is the use of admirable law-forms, and political
forms, if a hurricane of party feeling and a combination of monied interests
can beat them to the ground?
ACiv 11.302 12
There never was such a combination as this of ours...
EPro 11.325 7
...the aim of the war on our part is...to break up the false
combination of Southern society...
FRep 11.536 26
There never was such a combination as this of ours...
PLT 12.20 14
It is necessary to suppose that every hose in Nature fits every
hydrant; so only is combination, chemistry, vegetation, animation,
intellection possible.
PLT 12.23 22
...A body in the act of combination or decomposition enables
another body, with which it may be in contact, to enter into the same state.
PLT 12.49 23
...I speak of [Talent] in quite another sense, namely, in the
habitual speed of combination of thought.
Combination, n. (1)
Boks 7.192 10
...your chance of hitting on the right [book] is to be
computed by the arithmetical rule of Permutation and Combination...
combinations, n. (13)
Nat 1.13 17
The useful arts are reproductions or new combinations by the
wit of man, of the same natural benefactors.
LE 1.179 21
[Napoleon] believed that the great captains of antiquity
performed their exploits only by correct combinations...
Hist 2.6 6
...instinctively we at first hold to [property] with swords and laws
and wide and complex combinations.
NMW 4.237 27
Every thing depended on the nicety of [Napoleon's]
combinations...
ET5 5.84 4
[The English] apply themselves...to manufacture of
indispensable staples...and by their steady combinations they succeed.
ET15 5.272 16
If only [the London Times] dared to cleave to the right...it
might now and then bear the brunt of formidable combinations, but no
journal is ruined by wise courage.
Civ 7.23 15
The skilful combinations of civil government...require wisdom
and conduct in the rulers...
Art2 7.43 27
The pulsation of a stretched string or wire gives the ear the
pleasure of sweet sound, before yet the musician has enhanced this pleasure
by concords and combinations.
Clbs 7.247 17
I remember a social experiment...wherein it appeared that
each of the members fancied he was in need of society, but himself
unpresentable. On trial they all found that they could be tolerated by, and
could tolerate, each other. Nay, the tendency to extreme self-respect which
hesitated to join in a club was running rapidly down to abject admiration of
each other, when the club was broken up by new combinations.
Prch 10.225 3
...it is clear...is it not, that...when [a man] shall act from one
motive, and all his faculties play true...this...will give...not more facts, nor
new combinations, but divination, or direct intuition of the state of men and
things?
MoL 10.252 7
...the politician believes in his arts and combinations;...
SMC 11.365 13
...the regimental officers believed...that the misfortunes of
the day [battle of Bull Run] were not so much owing to the fault of the
troops as to the insufficiency of the combinations by the general officers.
FRep 11.533 7
Contrast, change, interruption, are necessary to new
activity, and new combinations.
combine, v. (27)
Con 1.299 26
...in a true society, in a true man both [Conservatism and
Reform] must combine.
YA 1.376 23
...this club of noblemen...combine to brave the sovereign...
YA 1.391 6
...the wise and just man will always feel...that if all went down,
he and such as he would quite easily combine in a new and better
constitution.
Hist 2.26 8
[The Greeks] combine the energy of manhood with the
engaging unconsciousness of childhood.
Comp 2.100 6
It is in vain to build or plot or combine against
[Compensation].
Int 2.339 1
The intellect...demands integrity in every work. This is resisted
equally by a man's devotion to a single thought and by his ambition to
combine too many.
PPh 4.57 9
Where there is great compass of wit, we usually find
excellencies that combine easily in the living man...
SwM 4.130 17
Success, or a fortunate g