He feels himself driven to this by the eschatological ideas in the last discourses.
Wrede, however, feels himself obliged to base it upon an historical fact, and, moreover, the same historical fact which is pointed to by the sayings in the Synoptics and the Pauline theology.
For--strange it may seem, but true it is--that a man is the more worthy to draw near to God the more he feels himself to be utterly unworthy thereof.
Despair brings death, but prayer does away with despair; and when a man has prayed he feels himself supported by new confidence and endowed with power to act.
I returned home more dead than alive, and lost twenty-four hours in that fearful perplexity in which a man is often thrown when he feels himself bound to take a decision without knowing what to decide.
The man who is delivered from great perplexity, no matter by what means, feels himself relieved.
Water not only cleanses man from bodily impurities, but in water the scales fall from his eyes: he sees, he thinks more clearly; he feels himself freer; water extinguishes the fire of appetite.
Despite all the fulness of his life, despite so strong a joy of living, despite noble inward talents and honorable spiritual desires and purposes, he feels himself wounded by the world and defrauded of his greatest treasures.
Character in matters great and small consists in a man steadily pursuing the things of which he feels himself capable.
Character in matters great and small consists," he says, "in a man steadily pursuing the things of which he feels himself capable.
The individual, released from tutelage, no longer feels himself part of a whole; he feels himself to be a little world which reflects, on a diminished scale, the whole of the great world.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "feels himself" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.