The faculty for remembering is not diminished= 45 =in proportion to what one has learnt, just as little as the number of moulds in which you cast sand lessens its capacity for being cast in new moulds.
Weigh not so much what men say, as what they prove: remembering that truth is simple and naked, and needs not invective to apparel her comeliness.
A sorrow's crown of sorrow is remembering happier things.
Two gifts are indispensable to the dramatic poet; one is the power of forgetting himself, the other is the power of remembering his characters.
And in all the hard days to come, Jane often found comfort in remembering those last quiet words.
Jane paced the dining-room in desperation, remembering the hours of thought which had gone to the compiling of sentences, cautiously preparing his mind to the revelation of the signature.
There is no need of my either forgetting or remembering it," said Rosemary, a little wearily.
She felt that she couldn't feign sickness and act a lie, after remembering that long-ago talk with her father.
Then remembering that her new friend was not as comfortably housed, Herminie added: "When I say that, I don't really mean it.
But remembering the pleasures of my bachelor life and of independence, I at first refused.
Still, remembering the terrible anguish of the countess when she commended the orphan to his protection, he said: "This much is certain: no one would speak in such terms of a stranger.
Senneterre is worthy of you," cried Ernestine, thoughtlessly, remembering only her conversation with the young duke the evening before.
Herminie sprang up and hastily dried her tears; then, remembering Mlle.
At first he was tempted to leave Polychrome and escape with his other friends, but remembering his promise to the Rainbow's Daughter Woot tried to think how to save her.
There was every reason why he should remain away—so much Anne had admitted to herself often, and always with a burning blush, rememberingwhat she knew and had read about the investigation through which her father was passing.
I don’t wonder the London newspapers guy Americans, remembering what kind of Americans find their way into London society.
Baskerville, remembering her untoward fate in being thrust into a position for which she was unfitted, and her genuine goodness and gentleness, felt a real regret at her death.
And remembering that when she had last seen herself in that mirror she had been a bride and in the glory of her youth, she could not but study the changes in herself.
And never, since the day of your marriage, my love, have I ever sat down to this table without remembering you and wishing that you were seated at this place,” he said.
He was thinking of Anne while talking to Elizabeth, remembering how she had disliked and dreaded this great function.
Whilst his sensibility was being stirred to morbid and distressing activity by recollection and fancy, he was suddenly surprised by remembering how repeatedly the same tame scene had come back to him in dreams,--i.
The biographer, who is eloquent about the manliness of Shelley's carriage, could not recall this friend of his heart and holder of his admiration, without remembering his meek and maidenly bearing and virginal sensibility.
Well, I don't know that I've ever found much advantage in remembering it.
Keats in these admonitions was no doubt remembering views of Shelley's such as are expressed in his words 'I consider poetry very subordinate to moral and political science.
Is Keats hereremembering the closing couplet of Shakespeare's great sonnet against lust-- This all the world well knows; but none know well To shun the heaven that leads men to this hell?
Let us indulge ourselves at any rate by remembering that it is the greatest among his successors who have held the most sanguine view as to the powers that were in him.
As to the significance in detail of the rites by which the transfer of power is effected, we are again helped by remembering that Keats was mixing up with his classic myth ideas taken from the Thousand and One Nights.
To her care he at the same time commends the Indian lady: who consents to go with her, and remembering the approaching festival of Diana says she will take part in it and consecrate herself to that sisterhood and to chastity.
While Keats sat in a brown study holding the reins, young Horne, remembering his school reputation as a boxer, in bravado threw a snowball at him and hit, but made off into safety before Keats could get at him to inflict punishment.
But looking up at the slope and rememberingmy visions, I laughed at the smallness of the field I had supposed would hold all heaven.
Time is a matter of individual memory, of remembering past events and of anticipating (which is memory reversed, as it were; memory projected) events to come.
See that your boots fit--fit, remembering that the feet swell (I speak to tenderfoots).
Each walker must, however, discover for himself what is the food best suited to his needs--remembering always that it is quite possible to spoil a whole day by even trivial dietetic mistakes.
And then in that dark and treacherous hour, with no face to look into his face, he felt an immense relief, remembering that if Thora was gone, the consequences of his life's error were at an end and he was free.
Remembering the past he thought Helga would have received his proposal with delight, but times had changed since they were together in Iceland and a cheerless smile hung about her lips as she shook her head.
Remembering this very well, though understanding little of the particulars, I read it over, and found it concern Sir Robt.
Strain as little as ever I can backwards, remembering that my pain will come by and by, though in the very straining I do not feel it.
Remembering this our necessary incapacity for the inquiry, let us try to carry it as far as we may.
Remembering that she was her half-sister, Regina lightly kissed the hollow cheek of the invalid.
Now look me in the eye and answer me solemnly, remembering that the God you reverence hears your words.
It struck me the more from remembering some years ago marvelling what could be the meaning of such a multitude of lakes in Friesland and other northern districts.
Nothing is so dreadful in this life as fear; it still sickens me when I cannot help remembering some of the many illnesses our children have endured.
We hurried to dress, remembering our engagements to breakfast this morning with a brother of our host, whose cottage stands on the same ground, within a few steps of our own.
I had a great curiosity to see Claude Lorraine's, remembering the poetical things that had been said and sung of him.
Being thus provided with all things necessary for comfort, we rattled merrily away, and I, remembering that I was in England, kept my eyes wide open to see what I could see.
Jemima, remembering that Ruth had once spoken of the place as one in which she had spent some time, while the county in which it was situated was the same in which Ruth was born.
When he spoke, without her seeing him, she could not help remembering former days.
I want to know how I am to keep remembering how old I am, so as to prevent myself from feeling so young?
Some one touched her shoulder while her thoughts were far away, rememberingpast January nights, which had resembled this, and were yet so different.
I cannot defend the order of preference, but by saying, that we have all some taste or other, of too ancient a date to admit of our remembering distinctly that it was an acquired one.
I have so much faith in my old friend's theory, that when I feel that idle vein returning upon me, I presently subside into my proper element of prose, remembering those eluding nereids, and that inauspicious inland landing.
Bentham, remembering the early bullying at Oxford, examines the catechism; and argues in his usual style that to enforce it is to compel children to tell lies.
There will also be things remembered or imagined, for with such things also we have immediate acquaintance at the moment of remembering or imagining.
Also in memory I perceive that what I am rememberingcame before the present time.