| Mary Elizabeth Shipley - 1873 - 408 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 Maker's...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... | |
| Mr. Faversham, Mrs. Woodward, Author of Ellen Clinton - 1873 - 446 pages
...means of knowing (however much he might have wished it) where she was, or how situated. CHAPTER III. " 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 Aitkin Bertram - 1877 - 766 pages
...might have brought The ore of truth from mines of thought ; And fancy's fairest flowers liad bloom'd tram ¿tain Forgotten — and impress'd again. There is in every human heart Some not completely barren... | |
| M H S - 1879 - 392 pages
...us not be weary in well-doing, for in due season we shall reap, if we faint not. GAL. vi. 9. THEEE 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 these,... | |
| Samuel A. Gardner - Sermons, American - 1886 - 220 pages
...can doubt the operation and final fruitage of God's love while joining with John Bovvring in saying: ''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.... | |
| William Hone - Almanacs, English - 1888 - 876 pages
...preserved the fruits to posterity. Let not him despair who desires to know, or has power to teachThere is m every human heart, Some not completely barren part. Where seeds of truth and love might glow A nd flowers of generous virtue blow ; To plant, to watch, to water there, This be our duty, be... | |
| Quakers - 1888 - 462 pages
...multitude, and quoted the following lines (which aptly describe some of his own leading features) : — " There is in every human heart Some not completely barren part, Where seeds of love and truth might grow, And plants of generous virtue blow ; To plant, to watch, to water there,... | |
| Society of Friends.. - Quakers - 1888 - 274 pages
...multitude, and quoted the following lines (which aptly describe some of his own leading features) : — " There is in every human heart Some not completely barren part, Where seeds of love and truth might grow, And plants of generous virtue blow ; To plant, to watch, to water there,... | |
| Julia W. Frothingham - Hymns, English - 1894 - 72 pages
...Tune, 8. 8. 8. 8. S 8., Franklin $q., p. 1jf (sing J^organ part}, & Hymns of the Ck. Universal,p. 12. THERE is in every human heart Some not completely barren part, Where seeds of love and truth might grow, And flowers of gen'rous virtue blow ; To plant, to watch, to water there,... | |
| Ethical Religion Society - Sick - 1899 - 124 pages
...Each brighter glory win ; The universe thy heart shall bless And strength shall enter in. Herbert New. THERE is in every human heart Some not completely barren part, Where seeds of love and truth might grow, And flowers of gen'rous virtue blow ; To plant, to watch, to water there,... | |
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