strives, by uniting the possible with the necessary, to produce the ideal. This let him imprint and express in fiction and truth ; imprint it in the sport of his imagination and the earnest of his actions; imprint it in all sensible and spiritual forms,... Critical and Miscellaneous Essays - Page 62by Thomas Carlyle - 1860Full view - About this book
| Thomas Carlyle - 1825 - 374 pages
...let him imprint and express in fic• tion and truth, imprint it in the sport of his im' agination and the earnest of his actions, imprint ' it in all...forms, and cast it ' silently into everlasting time.'* Nor were these sentiments, be it remembered, the mere boasting manifesto of a hot-brained inexperienced... | |
| Thomas Carlyle - 1825 - 368 pages
...let him imprint and express in fic• tion and truth, imprint it in the sport of his ime agination and the earnest of his actions, imprint ' it in all...forms, and cast it ( silently into everlasting time.'* Nor were these sentiments, be it remembered, the mere boasting manifesto of a hot-brained inexperienced... | |
| 1847 - 834 pages
...reality, let him leave to mere Understanding, which is here at home, the province of the Actual, while he strives by uniting the possible with the necessary,...Ideal. This let him imprint and express in fiction and in truth ; imprint it in the sport of his imagination and the earnest of his actions; imprint it in... | |
| Lydia Maria Child - 1833 - 352 pages
...the world. He himself followed the sublime advice he gave to artists ; he " imprinted ideal beauty on all sensible and spiritual forms, and cast it silently into everlasting time." He was born November, 1759, at Marbach, a small town in Wiirtemberg. His father was first a surgeon,... | |
| Lydia Maria Child - 1833 - 346 pages
...the world. He himself followed the sublime advice he gave to artists ; he " imprinted ideal beauty on all sensible and spiritual forms, and cast it silently into everlasting time." He was born November, 1759, at Marbach, a small town in Wiirtemberg. His father was first a surgeon,... | |
| Maurice Cross - 1835 - 520 pages
...»hich is here at home, the province of the actual; while he strives, by uniting the possible with Ike necessary, to produce the ideal. This let him imprint and express in fiction and truth ; toprint it in the sport of his imagination and the earnest of his actions ; imprint it in all sensible... | |
| Maurice Cross - 1835 - 920 pages
...a here at home, the province of ihe actual-, while tin strives, by uniting the possible willi a.ry, to produce the ideal. This let him imprint and express in fiction and truth ; «priât it in the sport of his imagination and the earnest of his actions; imprint it in all sensible... | |
| Charles Follen - 1837 - 322 pages
...province of the actual; while he strives from the union of the possible with the necessary to bring out the ideal. This let him imprint and express in fiction...forms, and cast it silently into everlasting time." * Nor were these sentiments, be it remembered, the mere boasting manifesto of a hot-brained inexperienced... | |
| Charles Follen - 1837 - 326 pages
...province of the actual; while he strives from the union of the possible with the necessary to bring out the ideal. This let him imprint and express in fiction...forms, and cast it silently into everlasting time." * Nor were these sentiments, be it remembered, the mere boasting manifesto of a hot-brained inexperienced... | |
| Monthly literary register - 1839 - 720 pages
...; let him leave to mere understanding, which is here at home, the province of the actual ; while he strives, by uniting the possible with the necessary,...and express in fiction and truth; imprint it in the N. s.—VOL. i. 4 N A truce to thought. Return we to the Great Room. We turn, instinctively, to the... | |
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