| Christian - English poetry - 1840 - 312 pages
...might have brought The ore of Truth from mines of thought ; And Fancy's fairest flowers had bloom'd Where Truth and Fancy lie entomb'd. — Insult him...heart, Some not completely barren part, Where seeds of love and truth might grow, And flowers of generous virtue blow ; To plant, to watch, to water there,... | |
| Christian - English poetry - 1840 - 318 pages
...And Fancy's fairest flowers had bloom'd Where Truth and Fancy lie entomb'd.— Insult him not—his blackest crime May, in his Maker's eye sublime, In...and many a stain, Forgotten, and impressed again. Where seeds of love and truth might grow, And flowers of generous virtue blow ; To plant, to watch,... | |
| Eliza Robbins - American poetry - 1842 - 352 pages
...from mines of thought; And fancy's fairest flowers had bloomed Where truth and fancy lie entombed. — Insult him not — his blackest crime May, in his...a stain, Forgotten, and impressed again. — There is,,in every human heart, Som •: not completely barren part, Where seeds of love and truth might... | |
| Sara Wood - English fiction - 1843 - 312 pages
...should like not to quarrel with society until we have seen what the Atherleys make it." CHAPTER V. " There is in every human heart Some not completely barren part, Where seeds of truth and love might glow, And flowers of generous virtue blow : To plant, to watch, to water there— This be our duty,... | |
| Unitarianism - 1845 - 880 pages
...illustrates the power of love of children to call up virtuous and tender feelings : it also shews that There is in every human heart Some not completely...part, Where seeds of truth and love might grow, And flow'rs of generous virtue blow. BOWRINO. " A foreman in the New York State prison in Auburn informed... | |
| Robert Aspland - 1845 - 878 pages
...the power of love of children to call up virtuous and tender feelings : it also shews that There ie *ӮOT +I3Jc *h ei s#Z {D9x\ m E 1 n ۓ^ k 2; q O a / /xgÑ K q flow'rs of generous virtue blow. BOWBINO. " A foreman in the New York State prison in Auburn informed... | |
| C. P. Bronson - Anatomy - 1845 - 330 pages
...regard to the dtlfA, (— ) pAuiel, (,;:?!) and Emphasis: glide out of the mechanical into the natural. There is, in every human heart, Some — not completely barren part, Where seeds of truth— and fore might grow, And flowers — of generous virtue blow ; To plant, to vtatch, to water there —... | |
| 1851 - 650 pages
...friend, we find the following: "We must always keep such company that will never make us blush." '" There is in every human heart, Some not completely barren part. Where seeds of love and truth might grow, And flowers of generous virtue blow. To plant, to watch, to water there,... | |
| Robert Aspland - 1848 - 788 pages
...deeply planted sympathy; Whose flowers are hope, its fruits are bliss, Beneficence its harvest is. There is in every human heart Some not completely...might grow, And flowers of generous virtue blow." BOWEING. Before proceeding to the prison labours of Mrs. Fry, we must mention, that the commencement... | |
| Servio (pseud.) - 1850 - 66 pages
...reflection, — And when again his rising shines, Thy day of resurrection. — Cowper. BELIEVE IT. There is, in every human heart, Some not completely...flowers of generous virtue blow. To plant, to watch, to water there, This be our duty — this our care. Bowring's "Matins arid tfespers." LOOK THROUGH... | |
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