Vietnam or Thailand ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !
Updated: June 9, 2025
"His constant and daring flights," writes Moscheles, "his newly discovered flageolet tones, his gift of fusing and beautifying objects of the most diverse kinds all these phases of genius so completely bewilder my musical perceptions that for days afterward my head is on fire and my brain reels." His tone lacked roundness and volume.
But Neil did not fancy Blanche, and he did like Bessie, and took her in to dinner, holding her little hand while she skipped and jumped at his side and looked up in his face with those great blue eyes which moved him strangely now, and which in the after time were to bewilder and intoxicate and awaken in him all the better impulses of his nature and then become the sweetest and the saddest memory of his life.
"I have a notion," he flung at her, "to take that white throat of yours in my two hands and choke you!" The words startled her, seemed to astound, bewilder. "You think that you that any man could do that?" It was hardly more than a whisper full of incredulity. "Well, I don't suppose that I would, anyway," he admitted.
They are for the heart rather than the mind. Of course you shall have them. They were written for you. All I have, all I am, is yours. Her face flushed, and grew pale again instantly. 'You must not talk so, she said. 'Remember. 'I can never forget. I do not know why you say remember. 'On second thoughts, I must not have the verses. I beg your pardon. 'Mary, you bewilder me.
"That brother Ned shouldn't be here now! Though I don't see the good of his being here. He'd only make matters worse. Run, Susan run over to Gran'pa Calvert, and tell him to come and stop them from fighting, while I hurry to Uncle William's. Lord save us! and let me get there in time." The widow had a great deal more to say, but this was quite enough to bewilder the little girl.
The charm and marvel of his discourse upset all judgments during his life, and for as long as his voice remained in the ear of his enchanted hearers; but, apart from the spell, it is clear to all sober and trained thinkers that Coleridge wandered away from truth and reality in the midst of his vaticinations, as the clairvoyant does in the midst of his previsions, so as to mislead and bewilder, while inspiring and intoxicating the hearer or reader.
The Constitution searched until the afternoon of the next day and then sighted her old friend, the Guerrière. To retell the story of their fight in all the vanished sea lingo of that day would bewilder the land-man and prove tedious to those familiar with the subject.
"Yes, that is true, but what will you have? There are many things in this incomprehensible world which are poisonous, and which, for that reason, are the more alluring. This is peculiarly so with women. He does well who avoids them; they bewilder our reason and make our hearts sick, but we do not flee from them.
Have we a philosophy that explains such an apparently simple thing as how one knows anything or of simple consciousness? Every philosopher that has attempted to explain consciousness or how we know, takes refuge in assumptions. At any Philosophical Society, if you ask for the explanation of simple Consciousness, the avalanche of answers, each differing from the other, will bewilder you.
They might talk; he would thank God for the crooked made straight. Bewilder his judgment they might with their glosses upon commandment and observance; but they could not keep his heart from gladness; and, being glad, whom should he praise but God? If there was another giver of good things he knew nothing of him. The hand was now as God had meant it to be.
Word Of The Day
Others Looking