Amiel's Journal: The Journal Intime of Henri-Frédéric Amiel, Volume 2 |
From inside the book
Results 6-10 of 38
Page 35
... religious feelings by making sacred subjects a theme for rhe- torical display . They shock the convenances of sentiment , and affront the delicacy of conscience by the indiscreet familiarities they take with the great mysteries of the ...
... religious feelings by making sacred subjects a theme for rhe- torical display . They shock the convenances of sentiment , and affront the delicacy of conscience by the indiscreet familiarities they take with the great mysteries of the ...
Page 40
... religious emotion . In his eyes the man who will not lend himself to these graceful fancies is vulgar , and the man who takes them seriously is prejudiced . He is enter- tained by the variations of conscience , but he is too clever to ...
... religious emotion . In his eyes the man who will not lend himself to these graceful fancies is vulgar , and the man who takes them seriously is prejudiced . He is enter- tained by the variations of conscience , but he is too clever to ...
Page 49
... religious fervour . Nature is indeed for me a Maïa ; and I look at her , as it were , with the eyes of an artist . My intelligence remains sceptical . What , then , do I believe in ? I do not know . And what is it I hope for ? It would ...
... religious fervour . Nature is indeed for me a Maïa ; and I look at her , as it were , with the eyes of an artist . My intelligence remains sceptical . What , then , do I believe in ? I do not know . And what is it I hope for ? It would ...
Page 68
... religious consciousness for check and ballast . In mixed States , Catholic or freethinking , the limit of action , being a merely penal one , invites incessant contravention . The puerility of the freethinkers consists in believing that ...
... religious consciousness for check and ballast . In mixed States , Catholic or freethinking , the limit of action , being a merely penal one , invites incessant contravention . The puerility of the freethinkers consists in believing that ...
Page 70
... religious question , and even now do not recognise that a liberal State is wholly incompatible with an anti - liberal religion , and almost equally incompatible with the absence of religion . They confound acci- dental conquests and ...
... religious question , and even now do not recognise that a liberal State is wholly incompatible with an anti - liberal religion , and almost equally incompatible with the absence of religion . They confound acci- dental conquests and ...
Other editions - View all
Amiel's Journal: The Journal Intime of Henri-Frédéric Amiel;, Volume 2 Henri Frederic Amiel No preview available - 2018 |
Common terms and phrases
absolute adore æsthetic Aletsch glacier Amiel Atheism beauty become believe Brahma charm Christianity Church civilisation conscience consciousness critic death desire destiny divine doubt dream duty Epicurus eternal Eumenides everything evil existence faith February feel force France French Geneva give Goethe happiness harmony heart holiness hope human Hyères idea ideal illusion imagination indifference individual infinite instinct intellectual justice kind labour legal fiction Liberal Christianity liberty living Madame Necker madness matter means melancholy mind Molière monad moral mystery nature ness never once one's oneself ourselves pain passion peace perfection perhaps philosophy poetry possible principle pure race realise reality reason recognise religion religious Sainte-Beuve Scheveningen Schopenhauer seems sense Sir John Lubbock soul speak spirit Stoicism suffering taste things thought tion true truth understand universal Victor Hugo vidual virtue whole wisdom word
Popular passages
Page 64 - there is more joy in heaven over one sinner that repenteth, than over ninety and nine just persons that need no repentance.
Page 234 - Chacun se réveille à ce son, Les Brebis, le Chien, le Garçon. Le pauvre Loup, dans cet esclandre, Empêché par son hoqueton, Ne put ni fuir ni se défendre. Toujours par quelque endroit fourbes se laissent prendre. Quiconque est Loup agisse en Loup : C'est le plus certain de beaucoup.
Page 362 - Entre toutes les différentes expressions qui peuvent rendre une seule de nos pensées, il n'y en a qu'une qui soit la bonne. On ne la rencontre pas toujours en parlant ou en écrivant ; il est vrai néanmoins qu'elle existe, que tout ce qui ne l'est point est faible, et ne satisfait point un homme d'esprit qui veut se faire entendre.
Page 360 - M'a dessillé les yeux, et me les vient d'ouvrir. Je vois, je sais, je crois, je suis désabusée...
Page 191 - We must treat our subject brutally and not be always trembling lest we should be doing it a wrong. We must be able to transmute and absorb it into our own substance. This sort of confident effrontery is beyond me ; my whole nature tends to that impersonality which respects and subordinates itself to the object; it is love of truth which holds me back from concluding and deciding.
Page 359 - The courses of nature, and the prodigious injustices of man in society, affect him with neither horror nor awe. He will see no monster if he can help it.
Page 348 - March 21, 1881. — This invalid life is too Epicurean. For five or six weeks now I have done nothing else but wait, nurse myself, and amuse myself, and how weary one gets of it ! What I want is work. It is work which gives flavor to life. Mere existence without object and without effort is a poor thing. Idleness leads to languor, and languor to disgust.
Page 216 - I have been thinking a great deal of Victor Cherbuliez. Perhaps his novels make up the most disputable part of his work, — they are so much wanting in simplicity, feeling, reality. And yet what knowledge, style, wit, and subtlety — how much thought everywhere, and what mastery of language ! He astonishes one ; I cannot but admire him. Cherbuliez's mind is of immense range, clear-sighted, keen, full of resource ; he is an Alexandrian exquisite, substituting for the feeling which makes men earnest...
Page 117 - The mind must have for ballast the clear conception of duty, if it is not to fluctuate between levity and despair. Before giving advice we must have secured its acceptance, or rather, have made it desired. If we begin by overrating the being we love, we shall end by treating it with wholesale injustice. It is dangerous to abandon oneself to the luxury of grief ; it deprives one of courage, and even of the wish for recovery.