31 collocations for heart

It looked as if he had not wholly taken to heart the lesson Sir Beverley had intended to convey, and if that were the caseagain Sir Beverley swore deep in his soulhe was fully equal to repeating it, ay, and again repeating it, until the youngster came to heel.

Ah! spare your swords, where beauty is to blame; Love gave th'affront, and must repair the same; When France shall boast of her, whose conqu'ring eyes Have made the best of English hearts their prize; Have power to alter the decrees of Fate, And change again the counsels of our state.

Stout hearts a-singing with freedom.

"Yet hearts refin'd their sadden'd tint retain, "The sigh is pleasure, and the jest is pain.

x.] He who has taken to heart the teaching of my philosophywho knows, therefore, that our whole existence is something which had better not have been, and that to disown and disclaim it is the highest wisdomhe will have no great expectations from anything or any condition in life: he will spend passion upon nothing in the world, nor lament over-much if he fails in any of his undertakings.

a friend who has opportunely brought back to France's mind and heart the deeds of her great ancestors at the time when fresh deeds of greatness and glory await accomplishment.

I do not believe she will take seriously to heart the defeat of the scheme to found a slaveholders' government.

But, when thy head drooped flow'r-like on my breast, Then did no word our souls' communion mar: Love spake to love without a sign or glance, And heart to heart its inmost depth revealed

But some, sad outcasts from this prize, Wither down to a lonely grave, All hearts their hidden love despise, And leave them to the whelming wave.

Sweete Quiet harbours in his harmeles head, And perfect Pleasure buildes her ioyous bowre, 135 Free from sad cares, that rich mens hearts devowre.

No; that subtile charm that draws lovers together, and breathes from heart to heart the sacred fire, had warned her.

Succeed, and thou shalt surely find That those who longed to see thee fail, And, lingering hopelessly behind, Spat venom on thine upward trail, Shall run to reach thee on thy path, To grasp thy hand and say "'Twas well"; Or, distant, gnaw their lips in wrath, Their envious hearts a living hell.

Not all the World, I am a Queen already, Crown'd by his Love, I must not lose for Fortune; I can give none away, sell none away, Sir, Can lend no love, am not mine own Exchequer; For in anothers heart my hope and peace lies.

The poor King has taken much to heart the injustice with which he has been treated by the coalition, and no doubt will not easily forget the ill-bred and insolent letter of Castlereagh to the Congress, wherein he said that the King of Saxony deserved to lose his dominions for adhering to Napoleon.

Bright expectation gleams from every face, And lighter footsteps bend with eager pace; Children and parents, pastor, people, all With one accord obey the welcome call; And hand in hand, along the path they wind, As heart responds to heart a greeting kind, To hold in verdant temples high and broad, Commune with Nature and with Nature's God.

Eyah, maybe he took it to heart a little, only a little.

Outlawed criminals often bear more humanity in their hearts than those cool, reproachless town burghers of virtue, in whose white hearts the power of evil, it is true, is quenchedbut with it, too, the power of good.

He burns; now all true hearts your triumphs ring:

The world, we doe acknowledge, cannot boast More resolution then the English hearts Seasond for action.

I know well that things happen in this world which must, which ought to make us sadso sad that at moments we envy the dead, who are gone home to their rest; real tragedies, real griefs, divine and Christlike griefs, which only loving hearts knowthe suffering of those we love, the loss of those we love, and, last and worst, the sin of those we love.

Where is the minstrel's Fatherland? 'Tis where the spirit warmest glows, Where laurels bloom for noblest brows, Where warlike hearts the truest vows Swear, lit by friendship's holy brand; There was once my Fatherland.

Not yet the gifted child, With notes enraptured, wild, That storm and throng the heart, To make his rage our own, Our hearts his lyric throne; Hard won by cosmic art.

Nothing could have corresponded better with the wishes of Charles V. For eight years past he had taken to heart the treaty of Bretigny, and he was as determined not to miss as he was patient in waiting for an opportunity for a breach of it.

In the meantime, and until the period arrives when honest poverty will be considered no crime, and when a seat next to a poor man will be thought nothing vulgar, or contaminating, whilst worshipping before Him who cares for souls not lucre, hearts not wealth, let the poor be put in some place where they can hear fairly without being unduly exhibited.

It behooves us to take more to heart the following words of a saintly man, devout Christian and profound scholar:"Men have divided the world into heathen and Christian, without considering how much good may have been hidden in the one, or how much evil may have been mingled with the other.

31 collocations for  heart