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Updated: May 7, 2025
Let us say no more upon these exciting topics this evening; but I will meditate, I will reflect upon the morrow, and then I will communicate to thee the result of my deliberations." "Oh! there is then hope for me yet!" cried Nisida, joyfully; "and thou hast the means to grant my wishes, but thou fearest to use them.
The night is already gone. It seems but a moment only a moment; would it had endured a year! Seed of the Church's spoiler, close thy perishing eyes, an' thou fearest to look upon " The rest was lost in inarticulate mutterings. The old man sank upon his knees, his knife in his hand, and bent himself over the moaning boy. Hark!
But this word would I leave with thee; if, perchance, I return not before many days, seek me on the border-land at the point nearest Roman dominions." He had come close to the old merchant, and uttered the last words in a tone very low and full of meaning. Girolamo started. "On the border-land of Rome!" he echoed. "This mission of thine is then weighty; and thou fearest "
I shall be cut off at once from enjoyment, and from hope; and the dreadful moment is now at hand. While he was speaking, the palace again shook, and he stood again in the presence of the Genius. 'ALMORAN, said the inhabitant of the unapparent world, 'the evil which thou fearest, shall not be upon thee.
"Little have I known of fear, Mopo," said Chaka, "yet I am afraid now; ay, as much afraid as when once on a bygone night the dead hand of Baleka summoned something that walked upon the faces of the dead." "And what fearest thou, O King, who art the lord of all the earth?" Now Chaka leaned forward and whispered to me: "Hearken, Mopo, I have dreamed a dream.
Never was mortal mood less romantic than mine, so I cannot account for the fancy which impelled me, there and then, to recite aloud, how The bridegroom led the flight, on his red roan steed of might; And the bride lay on his arm, still, as tho' she feared no harm, Smiling out into the night. "Fearest thou?" he said at last.
Thou wilt trust thyself within the toils of the grand deceiver. Thou wilt enter the list with his subtleties. Vain and arrogant, thou fearest not thy own weakness. Thou wilt stake thy eternal lot upon thy triumph in argument against one who, in spite of all his candour and humility, has his pride and his passions engaged on the side of his opinions.
The King would like it not if I allowed it here; he might say it was indeed truth what mine enemies say of me, that I plan to raise myself above them." "Wert thou afraid to come into my father's country and caused fear in him and all his people but me, and fearest thou here I should call thee father?
Third, Thy fear that Christ will not receive thee may arise from a sense of thine own unworthiness. Thou seest what a poor, sorry, wretched, worthless creature thou art; and seeing this, thou fearest Christ will not receive thee. Alas, sayest thou, I am the vilest of all men; a town-sinner, a ringleading sinner!
'I know that thou fearest God, not meaning that He learned the heart by the conduct, but that, on occasion of the conduct, He breathes into the obedient heart that calm consciousness of its service as recognised and accepted by Him, which is the highest reward that His friend can know.
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