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Grief is only the memory of widowed affections.
James Martineau
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James Martineau
Age: 94 †
Born: 1805
Born: April 21
Died: 1900
Died: January 11
Philosopher
Norwich
Norfolk
Grief
Memory
Memories
Widowed
Bereavement
Affections
Sympathy
Affection
More quotes by James Martineau
If it is permitted to the enlightened but baffled Statesman, when deserted and fallen from his place, to appeal from the voices of the moment to the judgment of more impartial times, with what right can we call in question the loftier form of the same prophetic trust which looks to a present God rather than to future men?
James Martineau
There is no human life so poor and small as not to hold many a divine possibility.
James Martineau
Trust arises from the mind's instinctive feeling after fixed realities, after the substance of every shadow, the base of all appearance, the everlasting amid change.
James Martineau
Grief is only the memory of widowed affection. The more intense the delight in the presence of the object, the more poignant must be the impression of the absence.
James Martineau
The mere lapse of years is not life. To eat, to drink, and sleep to be exposed to darkness and the light to pace around in the mill of habit, and turn thought into an instrument of trade-this is not life. Knowledge, truth, love, beauty, goodness, faith, alone can give vitality to the mechanism of existence.
James Martineau
I bow in reverence before the emotions of every melted heart....The more intense the delight in their presence, the more poignant the impression of their absence....When the tears of bereavement have had their natural flow, they lead us again to life and love's generous joy.
James Martineau
Religion is no more possible without prayer than poetry without language, or music without atmosphere.
James Martineau
Every man's highest, nameless though it be, is his 'living God'.
James Martineau
The pinafore of the child will be more than a match for the frock of the bishop and the surplice of the priest.
James Martineau
The incarnation is true, not of Christ exclusively, but of Man universally, and God everlastingly.
James Martineau
It was in His parting sorrow--that Jesus asked His disciples to remember Him and never was entreaty of affection answered so for ever since has His name been breathed in morning and evening prayers that none can count, and has brought down some gift of sanctity and peace on the anguish of bereavement, and the remorse of sin.
James Martineau
All beneficent and creative power gathers itself together in silence, ere it issues out in might.
James Martineau
We are each of us responsible for the evil we may have prevented.
James Martineau
We should count time by heart-throbs.
James Martineau
Heaven and God are best discerned through tears scarcely perhaps are discerned at all without them. The constant association of prayer with the hour of bereavement and the scenes of death suffice to show this.
James Martineau
God has so arranged the chronometry of our spirits, that there shall be thousands of silent moments between the striking hours.
James Martineau
Nothing less than the majesty of God, and the powers of the world to come, can maintain the peace and sanctity of our homes, the order and serenity of our minds, the spirit of patience and tender mercy in our hearts. Then will even the merest drudgery of duty cease to humble us, when we transfigure it by the glory of our own spirit.
James Martineau
We can neither change nor overpower God's eternal suffrage against selfishness and meanness.
James Martineau
High hearts are never long without hearing some new call, some distant clarion of God, even in their dreams and soon they are observed to break up the camp of ease, and start on some fresh march of faithful service.
James Martineau
Human character is never found to enter into its glory, except through the ordeal of affliction. Its force cannot come forth without the offer of resistance, nor can the grandeur of its free will declare itself, except in the battle of fierce temptation.
James Martineau