But the objectors stick it and die for the unformulated and unexpressed ideal.
In a vague and unexpressed way, as they show again and again by their cheerfulness and unconcernedness, hosts of men in this war have laid hold on this law.
From that hour dated the secret contest within her, the struggle against something which lay obscure and unexpresseddown in the farthest depths of her soul, and which, she was determined, should never gain dominion over her.
The young officer was evidently divided between doubt and confusion on the one hand, and some unexpressedfeeling on the other.
Seen from the inside the garden was not much; but, from the outside, it gave a distinct character to the house, and produced an unexpressed acknowledgment that the owner of it ought to belong to the county set.
Sophie and Lucy, too, were returning to their distant and dull banishment without any realisation of their probable but unexpressed ambition.
In the Moria Erasmus's own ideal dwells unexpressed behind the representation; in the Colloquia he continually and clearly puts it in the foreground.
And, intellectualist as he is, with his contempt for ignorance, he seems unaware that those religious observances, after all, may contain valuable sentiments of unexpressed and unformulated piety.
Her heart ached with a weight of unexpressed gratitude, and yet she could not keep it from beating with a fierce and triumphant gladness when she went up to where Michael was lying and found him alone.
There was always an unsatisfied, unexpressed part of me that girded at the satisfied part.
Where was Maurice's sensitiveness that it could not react to his unexpressed hatred of the idea of living with him?
Wedderburn was always the one who voiced sentimentally the unexpressed regrets of the other three.
Here existed, then, an unexpressed public opinion of America, of much latent influence, but for the moment largely negligible as affecting other classes or the Government.
We should probably do any little kindness for them, or expect the same from them; but there is nothing in common between us, and there is generally a mutual thoughunexpressed agreement that there shall be nothing in common.
When people complain of some cruel shame, which does not affect themselves personally, the complaint is generally accompanied by an unexpressed and unconscious feeling of satisfaction.
If you treat them well, your slightest wish will be their law; and they will do their best in their rude way to show their appreciation of kindness, by anticipating and meeting even your unexpressed wants.
The more this was tried the more did the children seem to think they were invited to a continuance of their ovation to the young curate, who finally retired amid the hearty though unexpressed congratulations of the company.
For a time, in his wretchedness and turmoil of spirit, Hal had scarcely noticed Ellis's withdrawal of fellowship, vaguely attributing his silence to unexpressed sympathy.
Some quality of unexpressed insistence in the stranger--or was it the speaker's own uneasiness of spirit?
So much of it as he left unexpressed is lost, therefore, like a novel that he might have written, but of which there can now be no question, since its only possible writer is gone.
I have still lots of unsatisfied curiosity and unexpressed affection, but they must stand over.
The mother, who was all mind, could not help having a certain involuntary unexpressed contempt for the daughter whose overwhelming physique carried her perpetually into a different world.
He looked at her for the answer to his unexpressed question.
He did not analyze the state of his mind, but probably his greatest delight lay in the unexpressed but intimate conviction that, should he close his hand, all those admiring human beings would starve.
It meant a world of unexpressed and inexpressible misery.
Nick had anunexpressed conviction that if, according to his defeated desire, he had embarked with Mrs. Dallow in this particular quest of a great prize, disaster would have overtaken them on the deep waters.
The lurking unexpressed is infinite, and affectation must have begun, long ago, with the first act of reflective expression--the substitution of the few placed articulate words for the cry or the thump or the hug.