The two metaphors of my text coincide in suggesting another thing, and that is the awful contrast in the average life between what is in a man and what comes out of him.
Lo, another man hath written above, and you are asked to make your life exactly the same, the same angles and the same corners--to make your life in all respects coincide with that.
Not till heaven is reached will 'love' be 'its own security,' and nature coincide with grace.
Louis Agassiz observed in 1853 that "the boundaries within which the different natural combinations of animals are known to be circumscribed upon the surface of the earth, coincide with the natural range of distinct types of man.
Rarely, for instance, does a customs boundary coincide with a political frontier, even in the most advanced states of Europe, except on the coasts.
When she related to her father what she had seen, he either disbelieved or affected to disbelieve it, and treated it as the effects of a distempered mind, the phantoms of a disordered imagination; and she at length began to coincide with him.
The period of our return into port, according to our orders, happened to coincide with this piece of good fortune, and we came up to Spithead, where our captain met with a hearty welcome from the admiral.
Thus would the Church at last become rigorously Catholic, and not as some theologians imagined, in their desire to make actual, incomplete facts coincide with a far wider theory, only Catholic by approximation.
Patrick revised the code and corrected what could not coincidewith the Christian religion.
Fresnel's zones are reduced to parallel and equidistant straight strips, which at certain angles coincide with the ruling.
Imagine a flexible lamina to be introduced so as to coincide with the plane at which resolution is to be effected.
The more natural course perhaps would be to assume this point to coincide with the centre of the area.
The southern boundary must coincide nearly with the north edge of the alluvial plains of Sylhet, for there is no evidence of its intrusion into the plains.
When shocks occur so frequently, as in these cases, it is inevitable that, even if all were independent, some should coincide approximately in time of occurrence.
The shock, however, was not observed in Corsica, so that the exact position of the epicentre is unknown; but Professor Mercalli believes it to coincide with the western or Nice epicentre of the principal earthquake.
These facts, as Professor Mercalli suggests, lead us to believe that the foci of the earthquakes coincide with a radial fracture of the volcano, the course of which, as traced by him, is represented by the continuous line in Fig.
They are the proper seat of the nutritive process, since they coincide with the capillary vessels.
All Federal Government is, in truth, a case in which what I have called the dignified elements of government do not coincide with the serviceable elements.
A capricious Parliament may always hope that his caprice may coincide with theirs.
In all the cases I might go on to inquire, How is it that man's Ideas, developed in his internal world, are found to coincide universally with the laws of the external world?
And this I give as the answer to the question, How it is that the necessary truths of Geometry universallycoincide with the relations of the phenomena of the universe?
We cannot make them other than they are; and all that we can do, if we can do that, is to shape our Ideas so that they shall coincide with the Facts, and still have the manifest connexion which belongs to them as Ideas.
The doctrine that the heavenly bodies were moved by vortices was successively modified, so that it came to coincide in its results with the doctrine of an inverse-quadratic centripetal force, as I have remarked in the History[268].
If so, the intuitive ethics would coincide with the utilitarian, and there would be no further quarrel between them.
The ring may be supposed of an unequal breadth in its different parts, and as consisting of irregular solids, whose common centre of gravity does not coincide with the centre of the figure.
Here, also, the celestial equator would coincide with the prime vertical, being a great circle passing through the east and west points.
The ecliptic will never coincide with the equator; and the entire extent of the variation, in its inclination, cannot exceed three degrees.
Place the apple so that the equator shall coincide with the wire; then the axis will lie directly across the plane of the ecliptic; that is, at right angles to it.
The arc through which the reflector is turned, to bring the reflected body to coincide with the other body, becomes a measure of the angular distance between them.
Our interest or duty may coincide with the line of conduct another presumes to prescribe.
Yet, in making such election, you must necessarily coincide with the wishes and act according to the commands of one of the bullies.
They can only coincide completely when neither the one nor the other is art, but only cunningly devised semblances of it.
And, therefore, the feelings transmitted by the art of our time not only cannot coincide with the feelings transmitted by former art, but must run counter to them.
The times of maximum monetary need of the customers of a bank never exactly coincide and many payments are made among the customers of a single bank, requiring only bookkeeping transfers.
In every petty medieval state or self-governing city, the aim was to make the economic boundaries coincide as nearly as possible with the political boundaries.
Footnote 19: This happened to coincide with a relative increase of the price of food-products and of other necessities of daily life at a greater rate than general prices.
On the other hand, the writer's experience does not lead him to coincide with those who state that the earliest lymph that can be obtained is the most energetic.
It is found in practice that the most decided results are obtained when the medicine is given in the evening, so that the time of its fullest antipyretic effects will coincidewith that of the morning remission.
The hottest, driest autumns of Siberia always coincide with the anthrax years, and in the last fifteen years in the United States I have noticed the wide extension of anthrax whenever the season has been unusually hot and dry.
A spiritual influence is an action upon a man, such that in consequence of it the very desires of a man are changed and coincide with what is demanded of him.
Thus the inner demands of a man's soul coincide with that external end of life which is placed before him.
But both parties could not be expected to coincide verbally in phrases descriptive of their meeting, and its details.
Of course it may be argued that the 'Diurnal' and Birrel's 'Diary' coincide in an error of date.
Now two contemporary townsmen of Edinburgh, Birrel, and the author of the 'Diurnal of Occurrents,' coincide in making Mary leave Edinburgh on January 20.
I use my powers on your behalf because our desires generally coincide and your help is convenient, not because you are necessary to me.
And if such an Inquisitor/Team Leader's opinion of what is in the Kingdoms' best interest happens not to coincide with current canon or civil law?
The feast hangs upon this, and it will be seen that the most interesting event of the celebration must exactly coincide with the passage of the sun.
The early Fathers, relying on a notice of an eclipse that seemed to coincide in time, though it really did not, fancied that the darkness was caused by it, but incorrectly.
Some fanciers attach a piece of lead to the recusant ear in order to make it coincide with the other, but we do not agree with the practice.
This may be fixed at any convenient elevation, and its centre should exactly coincide with the centre of the bar.
Use the sharp-pointed needle and join the coils in such a way that the threads will coincide with the twist.
On these partitions turn all four laps to the right, to coincidewith the laps on the box.