57 examples of rebirth in sentences

It is not foreordained; true, if we will it, it may be a reign of disaster, a parallel to the well-recognized "Dark Ages" of history, but also, if we will, it may be a new and a true "renaissance," a rebirth of old ideals, of old honour, of old faith, only incarnate in new and noble forms.

Then, as they cry, they cease to wander in the jungles of the senses, rebirth comes no more, and the peace of Nirvana is won.

Ay, but I'm free from rebirth and from death, And all that dragged me back is hurled away.

What martial soul there found rebirth, When on those cliffs, then scarcely known, There once more visited the earth The spirit called Napoleon?

FRASER NOTE ON THE HISTORY OF THE SONNET IN ENGLISH LITERATURE PROLOGUE I. REBIRTH II.

Our beings met,I felt her soul in mine; I REBIRTH

And that brings me to the second part of this question, which is whether, quite apart from the possible reform and spiritual rebirth of the legal profession, there is not also the possibility of balancing and correcting its influence.

This epoch is termed the Renaissancewhich literally means a rebirth or revival.

Marguerite Winslow Plummer Sheahan (C); 11Oct54; R137081. Rebirth.

SEE Plummer, George Winslow. Rebirth.

Nard Jones (A); 12Mar62; R292309. Rebirth.

LEWISOHN, LOUISE. Rebirth.

LEWISOHN, LUDWIG, ed. Rebirth; a book of modern Jewish thought.

The rebirth of French poetry.

The rebirth of French poetry; an imaginary interview.

Marguerite Winslow Plummer Sheahan (C); 11Oct54; R137081. Rebirth.

SEE Plummer, George Winslow. Rebirth.

SEE Kelly, Eric P. KEMNITZER, WILLIAM J. Rebirth of monopoly; a critical analysis of economic conduct in the petroleum industry of the United States.

The rebirth of Flower McRoy.

The rebirth of French poetry.

The rebirth of French poetry; an imaginary interview.

The rebirth of French poetry.

Those illustrious persons among Brahmanas or Kshatriyas or Vaisyas or Sudras that bathe in Pushkara are freed from the obligation of rebirth.

Repairing thither, a person becometh exempted from the pain of rebirth.

REFERENCES: Wright: St. Patrick's Purgatory (London, 1844); Krapp: The Legend of St. Patrick's Purgatory (Baltimore, 1900); Becker: Mediaeval Visions of Heaven and Hell (Baltimore, 1899); Shackford: Legends and Satires (Boston, 1913); Meyer and Nutt: The Voyage of Bran, edited and translated by K. Meyer, with an Essay on the Irish Version of the Happy Other World and the Celtic Doctrine of Rebirth, by A. Nutt, 2 vols.

57 examples of  rebirth  in sentences