Light From Many LampsA classic treasury of inspiration featuring hundreds of passages and quotations—selected from the wisdom of the ages—offering invaluable insight and guidance on the challenges of daily life. Here are not only the best of the world’s most inspiring thoughts and ideas, but the stories behind them: how they came to be written and what their impact has been on others. A storehouse of inspired and inspiring reading, it is a collection of brief, stimulating biographies as well. There are selections from John Burroughs, Alfred Tennyson, Robert Browning, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Abraham Lincoln, Franklin D. Roosevelt, William Cullen Bryant, Ralph Waldo Emerson, William Shakespeare, Hippocrates, Confucius, and many others. A distillation of the greatest thoughts, ideas, and philosophies that have been handed down to us through the ages, this is a book to turn to over and over again—a book of moral, spiritual, and ethical guidance—an unfailing source of comfort and inspiration for all. |
Nội dung mọi người đang nói đến - Viết bài đánh giá
Xếp hạng của người dùng
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Google không xác minh bài đánh giá nhưng có kiểm tra để t́m nội dung giả và xoá nội dung đó khi t́m thấy
LibraryThing Review
Đánh giá của Người dùng - jbdavid - LibraryThingWhat an excellent collection to uplift and dip into at any time. One of my all time favourites that, when I come across at the second hand bookshops, I buy and give away. Đọc toàn bộ bài đánh giá
Nội dung
The secret of happiness is something to do | 3 |
Let me live by the side of the road | 6 |
To find happiness we must seek for it in | 11 |
How essential it is to be able to live | 19 |
PART | 31 |
Lead kindly Light The night | 39 |
So by my woes to | 45 |
My faith in God is complete so I | 50 |
SelfDiscipline The Development of Character | 161 |
The divinity that shapes our ends is in our | 169 |
I will lead my life and practice my art in uprightness | 180 |
Faith hope and love these threeand the greatest | 186 |
What you do not wish done to yourself do not do | 193 |
With malice toward none with charity | 203 |
PART SEVEN | 213 |
You want to gain emotional poise? | 219 |
Thejourneyisdone O thou soul of | 57 |
Without Divine assistance I cannot succeed | 68 |
This too shall pass away | 74 |
I am the master of my fate | 85 |
I would no longer resist and struggle I | 95 |
Goodbye Iam not at all afraid | 104 |
tained and soothed by an unfaltering trust | 108 |
I wish to take from every grave its fear | 116 |
PART FOUR | 133 |
You wake up in the morning and lo your | 142 |
We must do the best we can with | 153 |
I rave no more gainst Time or Fate | 227 |
PART EIGHT | 239 |
At the end only two things really matter to | 248 |
Old age is the consummation of life | 261 |
The shadows of evening lengthen about | 267 |
PART | 279 |
The age in which we live can become | 287 |
Our thinking in the future must be world | 297 |
The only limit to our realization | 309 |
319 | |
Ấn bản in khác - Xem tất cả
Thuật ngữ và cụm từ thông dụng
achievement Arnold Bennett asked beautiful bereaved better brave called centuries comfort Confucius countless courage dark dead death despair dream Elbert Hubbard enduring essay face faith famous favorite fear feel friends future give gone grief grow hand happiness Harry Emerson Fosdick heart Henry Henry David Thoreau Henry Francis Lyte Henry Wadsworth Longfellow hope human hymn important influence inspiring knew later life's light live look lost man's Marcus Aurelius Mary Roberts Rinehart millions mind morning nation Nearer never night ourselves pain pass peace philosophy poem prayer quiet quotation Ralph Waldo Emerson Robert Robert Browning sail serene sorrow soul spirit story success thee things Thomas Carlyle thou thought told turned victory wanted William William Shakespeare wise words write written wrote young
Tài liệu tham khảo sách này
Loving Each Other: The Challenge of Human Relationships Leo F. Buscaglia Xem một số câu liên quan - 1984 |