The Hebrew Church demanded the instant fruitage of the death of Christ.
We must ever be content to spend our labor upon beginnings, thankful for such fruitage as may appear from time to time.
But this spirit is growing and there will be larger fruitagein the coming days.
Entranced dreamer, haste; There's fruitage in my garden that I would have thee taste.
For nearly two centuries it flourished with such fruitage of blessing as had never before been known.
Fungi of fallacy, particularly in the field of modern religious systems, are of no such sturdy growth and wholesome fruitage as the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has progressively manifested.
That church is not thefruitage of man's planting, neither the offshoot of other and older institutions.
The sin itself may spring from the sensual thought, the lustful glance; just as murder is often the fruitage of hatred or covetousness.
Each of us may accept or reject the message of eternal life, the Gospel of Jesus Christ; and by all reason and consistency each shall garner the fruitage of his choice.
Yet at a very early date, in Greece and Rome, science had asserted itself, and a beginning had been made which seemed destined to bring a large fruitage of blessings.
Old slumbering neighbourhood or personal quarrels bore in this way a strange fruitage of revenge; for the cardinal doctrine of a fanatic's creed is that his enemies are the enemies of God.
Thus came a new impulse to research, and the fruitage was abundant; the older theological interpretation, with its insoluble puzzles, yielded on all sides.
Here, too, scientific modes of thought in social science have given a new and nobler fruitage to the whole growth of Christian benevolence.
Late planting will grow, perhaps, if excessive heat does not kill the seed or wither the shoot; but before it comes to fruitage the frosts of autumn will blight it, flower and stem and root.
So all night our shallop passed Many a haunt of old desire, Blurs of savage blossom massed Red above a pirate-fire; Huts that gloomed and glanced among Fruitage dipping in the blue; Songs the sirens never sung, Shores Ulysses never knew.
When the waters lay breathless Gazing at Hesper Guarding that glorious Fruitage of gold, Heard we the deathless Wonderful whisper We follow, victorious To-night, as of old.
IV Then when the angels, the reapers at the ending, Gather the fruitage which our lives have grown, May we with gladness, angel toil attending, Sing of the harvest at the heavenly home.
There the Wood-apple hung its load, The Mango and the Citron glowed, The Bel and scented Jak were there, And Apelá withfruitage fair.
She for her child no toil would spare Tending me long with pain and care; Now in the hour of fruitage she Has lost that son, ah, woe is me.
O Palm, in rich ripe fruitage dressed Round as the beauties of her breast, If thou have heart to know and feel, My peerless consort’s fate reveal.
Steeds, elephants, and cars are there, And drums’ loud music fills the air, Fair trees in lovely gardens grow Whose boughs with varied fruitage glow.
Thou sprangest up in haste to seize What seemed the fruitageof the trees.
That exquisite poise of character, which we call serenity is the last lesson of culture, the fruitage of the soul.
Act is the blossom of thought, and joy and suffering are its fruits; thus does a man garner in the sweet and bitter fruitage of his own husbandry.
Every thought-seed sown or allowed to fall into the mind, and to take root there, produces its own, blossoming sooner or later into act, and bearing its own fruitage of opportunity and circumstance.
The black clouds are even now gathering upon the fringes of the sky, and the mellow season of the fruitage ends.
Man is much more complex than the fruits and so it takes a longer interval to prepare a great human harvest, hence humanity has its supreme fruitage only every third or fourth century.
It does not mean a final arrest of the entire process which is conceived of as continuing only in a regressive manner back to a kathekotic[26] condition wherein it embodies the fruitage of the entire scheme.
But its better fruitage added an element to the composite American type which could not and cannot be spared.
The plow of slavery had been followed by the harrow of war,--blossoms and fruitage could not instantly follow.
The fruitage of the tree of life is all too fine to feed the carnal mind.
I am risen from the dead, first fruitage of the grave!
The gatherers rejoiced as, day by day, they carried the rich fruitage to the press.
Now, in the vintage time the man sent forth a servant to receive and bring to him his portion of the fruitage of the vines.
Liberty is for him the perfect fruitage of the benevolent despotism.
I deem it well-nigh unnecessary to state that the first four suggestions emanated from my pen: the remaining five being fruitage of the inventive fancies of my young friends.
Indeed, at this moment, as I indite this pledge, speculation as to its outcome engenders in me an uplifting of the spirit which bodes well for the futurefruitage of my ambition.
The air, freighted with the rich fruitage of full summer, hung close and heavy.
The action is but the visible fruitageof the invisible spiritual impulse.
In the schools and the homes that are to be in our good land we may well hope that decorum will be emphasized and magnified; for decorum is evermore the fruitage of intellectuality and genuine culture.
It is thefruitage that I'm fond of--especially when it is a bale to the acre.
Business is anathema to me; but I must confess that it gives me pleasure to watch the germination of the seed, and to behold the flower and fruitage of the soil.
Nothing living can blossom into fruitage unless through nourishing stalks deep-planted in the common soil.
The brave seed of her scattering In fruitage everywhere.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "fruitage" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.