Be careful to ohserve the Truth in all things. Quotations used as Mottoes, Vols. I to V1. A curséd fiend brought death, disease, and pain, A blessed friend brought breath and ease again. All things are double, one against another. A philosopher restest not, unless he have the center of a thing. vi, 333 i, back of title-page ii, 414 ii, 593 iv, 365 Diruit, ædificat, mutat quadrata rotundis. Blessed is he who is conversant in these good things. iv, 223 ii, 481 ii, 378 cover v, (99-132), 123 Emerson said that Goethe said that Plato said CULture. ii, title-page iv, 271 iii, 157 ii, 361 Go on, and the Light will come to you. Give me a place to stand and I will move the world. Geometrical equality can do great things, among gods and men. v, 149 God hath spoken once; two-fold is what I heard. God is a circle whose circumference is everywhere, and whose center is nowhere to be found. God perpetually geometrizes. vi, 365 iii, 61 v, title-page iv, cover, 1887 iii, 141 He who lived long ago, in the morning of the world, when earth was nearer heaven than now. He is a rash man, who, outside of pure mathematics, pronounces the word impossible. Heaven is one; how can there be more than one God there? vi, 349 v, 57 V, 73 He who knows himself, knows his own Creator. vi, 285 History is philosophy teaching by example. ii, 341 How oft we lay the volume down to ask. How can I think each separate, and all one? iii, 109 ii, 336 Humanity is but a man who lives perpetually and learns con tinually. iv, 397 I cannot tell how the truth may be. ii, 368 If Jupiter were to speak. he would speak as Plato did. iv, 427 i, 102 iv, 223 It neither speaks nor hides, but signifies. KNOW THYSELF descended from Heaven. I think, therefore, I am is the first and most certain Truth in philosophy. King, law, light, leader. Rex, lex, lux, dux. Learn to know all; but keep thyself unknown. Let no one ignorant of geometry enter here. iii, and iv, title-page Language, rhetoric, logic, arithmetic, music, geometry, astronomy. v, back of title-pags iii. 29 ii, 345 iii, 125 v, I Nothing is lost, but all transmutes and becomes. ii, 657 i, 185 i, facing I Multa rogare; rogata tenere; retenta docere ; Hæc tria discipulum faciunt superare magistrum. Nothing is beautiful but the Truth. One Truth is clear, whatever is, is right. Plato, thou reasonest well. Quos anguis tristi diro cum vulnere stravit, Hos sanguis Christi miro tum munere lavit. vi, back of title-page Rex, lex, lux, dux. King, law, light, leader. Rich is that universal self whom thous worshippest as the soul. v, 25 Stand out from between me and the sun. vi,back of title-page The great ocean of Truth lay all undiscovered before me. but one. vi, 237 iii, 189 iv, 301 iii, and iv, title-page The laws of nature are the mathematical thoughts of God. v, 181 ii, back of There is no religion higher than Truth. title-page ii, 449 There's a divinity that shapes our ends. vi, 253 The search after Truth is admiration. iv, 255 The soul has three vehicles: t etherial; 2 aerial, 3 terrestrial. vi, 269 The time is born for Enoch to speak, and Elias to work again. vi, 317 The time that bears no fruit deserves no name. iv, 381 The universe, is but a mean between two extremes. iii,77 iv, 317 They are never alone who are accompanied with noble thoughts. iv, 333 Think on these things. This is the way to Light. ent's venomed In Christ's miraculous blood have healing found. Thou art an emanation of the Eternal Mind. Thou seed of a Divine Mind art sprung from Hercules. 'Tis greatly wise to talk with our past hours, } And ask them what report? Truth always has the vantage ground. Truth crushed to earth shall rise again. Truth for authority, and not authority for Truth. Truth is established by scrutiny and deliberation. Truth is heavy; few, therefore, can bear it. Truth is great and mighty above all things. ii, 401 Truth is the body of God, as Light is his shadow. ii, 337 Truth is the music of Heaven. ii, 465 Truth is the speech of inwood purity. i!, 417 Truth, like a torch, the more it's shook it shines. ii, 321 Truth must be sought for at the bottom of the well. il, 385 Whatsoever on earth existeth, in a seven it consisteth. vi, 397 What's done we partly may compute. ii, 352 When Adam was made, the ancient worlds were called forth again. V, 41 When found, make a note of. i, 3 Who offends against heaven has none to whom he can pray. Who can travel from Dan to Beersheba, and cry, 'Tis all barren? ii, 384 vi, 381 v, 89 Who thinks most, feels the noblest, acts the best. ii, 488 vi, 221 |