| 1861 - 458 pàgines
...holily ! Glorious kitchen, where the best friends — John and Charles, the two Stephens, Sallitzi, Finnit and George, Tobias and Gaspar — fight for...nothing but thorns and dirt. The poverty of Christ has less pinching parsimony, less meanness, than the emperor's palace. But if we speak of the spiritual... | |
| Richard Simpson - 1867 - 408 pàgines
...holily ! Glorious kitchen, where the best friends — John and Charles, the two Stephens, Sallitzi, Finnit and George, Tobias and Gaspar — fight for...nothing but thorns and dirt. The poverty of Christ has less pinching parsimony, less meanness, than the emperor's palace. But if we speak of the spiritual... | |
| Barbara Frances M. comtesse de Courson - 1879 - 444 pàgines
...Believe me, my dearest brothers, that your dust, your brooms, your chaff, your loads, are beheld by the angels with joy, and that through them they obtain...your hands sceptres, jewels, and purses of gold.' Campion's filial love for the Society breaks out again and again in his letters. ' For I know,' he... | |
| David Andrew Merrick - 1891 - 146 pàgines
...Believe me, my dearest brethren, that your dust, your brooms, your chaff, your loads are beheld by the angels with joy, and that through them they obtain...in your hands sceptres, jewels, and purses of gold. ..." I know what liberty there is in obedience, what pleasure in labor, what sweetness in prayer, Avhat... | |
| Richard Simpson - 1896 - 558 pàgines
...holily! Glorious kitchen, where the best friends — John and Charles, the two Stephens, Sallitzi, Finnit and George, Tobias and Gaspar — fight for...nothing but thorns and dirt. The poverty of Christ has less pinching parsimony, less meanness, than the emperor's palace. H But if we speak of the spiritual... | |
| Bede Camm - 1905 - 740 pàgines
...Believe me, my dearest brothers, that your dust, your brooms, your chaff, your loads, are regarded by angels with joy, and that through them they obtain...nothing but thorns and dirt. The poverty of Christ has less pinching parsimony, less of weariness, than an emperor's palace. But if we speak of the spiritual... | |
| Richard Dutton, Alison Gail Findlay, Richard Wilson - 2003 - 286 pàgines
...he wrote to novices at Brno, after he had taken his vows and had returned to the college at Prague: Believe me, my dearest brethren, that your dust, your...nothing but thorns and dirt. The poverty of Christ has less pinching parsimony, less meanness, than the emperor's palace. 30 And again he wrote from Prague... | |
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