I broke my chains and will do anything and everything to make sure they are
never laid upon me again.
Not exact matches
«We might well say that learning how to do this properly is a
never - ending task
laid upon each of us.»
The obligations, in fact, which the New Covenant
lays upon us can
never be exhausted: man's reach must always exceed his grasp.
But the subsequent discussion showed that Bultmann was concerned to minimize this element of continuity for the following reasons: (1) he was fearful that historical research might come to be used to legitimate the kerygma, which would be a denial of its nature as kerygma; and (2) he insisted that there can be no real material continuity, because the kerygma
lays major emphasis
upon a particular understanding of the death of Jesus, whereas we can
never know how the historical Jesus understood his own death, and must always face the possibility that he simply broke down before it.
The best minds will tell you that when a man has begotten a child he is morally bound to tenderly care for it, protect it from hurt, shield it from disease, clothe it, feed it, bear with its waywardness,
lay no hand
upon it save in kindness and for its own good, and
never in any case inflict
upon it a wanton cruelty.
I just
never recovered intimately because of this rule he
laid upon me during recovery.
As far as painting specifically is concerned, Mrs. Ellis finds that it has one immediate advantage for the young lady over its rival branch of artistic activity, music — it is quiet and disturbs no one (this negative virtue, of course, would not be true of sculpture, but accomplishment with the hammer and chisel simply
never occurs as a suitable accomplishment for the weaker sex); in addition, says Mrs. Ellis, «it [drawing] is an employment which beguiles the mind of many cares... Drawing is, of all other occupations, the one most calculated to keep the mind from brooding
upon self, and to maintain that general cheerfulness which is a part of social and domestic duty... It can also,» she adds, «be
laid down and resumed, as circumstance or inclination may direct, and that without any serious loss.»
The story itself could feasibly be enough, but once again Starling's use of conduit is what stops us in our tracks offering a visual many have
never laid eyes
upon.
As a scientist, I know I can talk to the
lay person, politician, journalist, or whomever, and make it sound lie a crisis or a no -
never - mind, like a well defined and understood situation of a confusing case where superficial answers based
upon what I want you to hear, and so forth.