We must repeat the often repeated saying, that it is unworthy a religious man to view an irreligious one either with alarm or aversion, or with any other feeling than regret and hope and brotherly commiseration.
More Quotes from John Keats:
The uttered part of a man's life, let us always repeat, bears to the unuttered, unconscious part a small unknown proportion. He himself never knows it, much less do others.John Keats
O, for a draught of vintage that hath been Cooled a long age in the deep-delvid earth...
John Keats
Here lies one whose name was writ in water.
John Keats
An extensive knowledge is needful to thinking people- it takes away the heat and fever and helps, by widening speculation, to ease the Burden of the Mystery
John Keats
My passions are all asleep from my having slumbered till nearly eleven and weakened the animal fiber all over me to a delightful sensation about three degrees on this sight of faintness -- if I had teeth of pearl and the breath of lilies I should call it languor -- but as I am I must call it laziness. In this state of effeminacy the fibers of the brain are relaxed in common with the rest of the body, and to such a happy degree that pleasure has no show of enticement and pain no unbearable frown. Neither poetry, nor ambition, nor love have any alertness of countenance as they pass by me.
John Keats
Load every rift of your subject with ore.
John Keats
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Based on Keywords: commiseration, irreligiousThe enemy fought with savage fury, and met death with all its horrors, without shrinking or complaining: not one asked to be spared, but fought as long as they could stand or sit.
Davy Crockett
Margaret had close links with Geneva where she had spent some years as a student while her parents had been wardens of the Quaker Hostel there and where she had gone back as secretary to Gilbert Murray.
James Meade
Art never seems to make me peaceful or pure.
Willem de Kooning