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" ... enough to do, to bear with patience and fortitude the real afflictions with which God may visit him, without venturing to fill up the intervals in which He has left him ease, and even invites him to gladness, by a self-imposed and artificial sorrow.... "
Margaret Percival in America: A Tale - Página 39
por Edward Everett Hale, Lucretia Peabody Hale - 1850 - 284 páginas
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Eclectic Magazine, and Monthly Edition of the Living Age, Volumen10

John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell - 1847 - 606 páginas
...him to gladness, by a self-imposed and artificial sorrow. Nay, if his mind be well constituted, he will feel that the learning how to apply, in hours...him ; not to mention that the grateful reception of God'a gifts is as true a part of duty — and even a more neglected part of it — than a patient submission...
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Essays, Selected from Contributions to the Edinburgh Review ...

Henry Rogers - 1850 - 536 páginas
...he will feel that the learning how to apply, in hours of happiness, the truths which he has pondered in the school of sorrow, is not one of the least difficult...— than a patient submission to his chastisements. It is at our peril, then, that we seek to interfere with the discipline which is provided for us. He...
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Essays: Biographical and critical

Henry Rogers - 1850 - 542 páginas
...him to gladness, by a self-imposed and artificial sorrow. Nay, if his mind be well constituted, he will feel that the learning how to apply, in hours of happiness, the truths which he has pondered in the school of sorrow, is not one of the least difficult lessons which...
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Reason and Faith, and Other Miscellanies of Henry Rogers

Henry Rogers - 1853 - 470 páginas
...him to gladness, by a self-imposed and artificial sorrow. Nay, if his mind be well constituted, he will feel that the learning how to apply, in hours of happiness, the truths which he has pondered in the school of sorrow, is not one of the least difficult lessons which...
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Reason and Faith, and Other Miscellanies of Henry Rogers

Henry Rogers - 1853 - 478 páginas
...him to gladness, by a self-imposed and artificial sorrow. Nay, if his mind be well constituted, he will feel that the learning how to apply, in hours of happiness, the truths which he has pondered in the school of sorrow, is not one of the least difficult lessons which...
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Bacon's essays, with annotations by R. Whately

Francis Bacon (visct. St. Albans.) - 1856 - 562 páginas
...him to gladness, by a self-imposed and artificial sorrow. Nay, if his mind be well constituted, he will feel that the learning how to apply, in hours...— than a patient submission to his chastisements. ' It is at our peril, then, that we seek to interfere with the discipline which is provided for us....
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Bacon's Essays: With Annotations

Francis Bacon, Richard Whately - 1857 - 578 páginas
...him to gladness, by a self-imposed and artificial sorrow. Nay, if his mind be well constituted, he will feel that the learning how to apply, in hours...— than a patient submission to his chastisements. ' It is at our peril, then, that we seek to interfere with the discipline which is provided for us....
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The Thoughts, Letters and Opuscules of Blaise Pascal

Blaise Pascal - 1859 - 562 páginas
...him to gladness, by a self-imposed and artificial sorrow. Nay, if his mind be well constituted, he will feel that the learning how to apply, in hours...— than a patient submission to his chastisements. It is at our peril, then, that we seek to interfere with the discipline which is provided for us. He...
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The Thoughts, Letters, and Opuscules of Blaise Pascal

Blaise Pascal - 1864 - 560 páginas
...him to gladness, by a self-imposed and artificial sorrow. Nay, if his mind be well constituted, he will feel that the learning how to apply, in hours...lessons which he has learned in the school of sorrow, is uot one of the least difficult lessons which sorrow has to teach him ; not to mention that the grateful...
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Bacon's Essays

Francis Bacon - 1868 - 786 páginas
...him to gladness, by a self-imposed and artificial sorrow. Nay, if his mind be well constituted, he will feel that the learning how to apply, in hours...— than a patient submission to his chastisements. ' It is at our peril, then, that we seek to interfere with the discipline which is provided for us....
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