(J. Hudson Taylor. Dwelling in Him. Robesonia: Overseas Missionary Fellowship).
“The philosophical thought of Kant, the supreme flower of the Germanic people, has its roots in the religious feeling of Luther, and it is not possible for Kantism, especially the practical part of it, to take root and bring forth flower and fruit in peoples who have not undergone the experience of the Reformation and who perhaps were incapable of experiencing it. Kantism is Protestant, and we Spaniards are fundamentally Catholic. And if Krause struck some roots here — more numerous and more permanent than is commonly supposed — it is because Krause has roots in pietism, and pietism, as Ritschl has demonstrated in his Geschichte des Pietismus, has specifically Catholic roots and may be described as the irruption, or rather the persistence of Catholic mysticism in the heart of Protestant rationalism. And this explains why not a few Catholic thinkers in Spain became followers of Krause.”
The Tragic Sense of Life (1913), XI : The Practical Problem
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Miguel de Unamuno 199
19th-20th century Spanish writer and philosopher 1864–1936Related quotes
“To me, our destinies seem flower and fruit
Born of an ever-generating root…”
Life Without and Life Within (1859), The One In All
“They more adeptly bend the willow's branches
who have experience of the willow's roots.”
Sonnet 6 (as translated by Edward Snow)
Sonnets to Orpheus (1922)
A Poet!—He Hath Put His Heart to School, l. 9 (1842).
“Not now. Love itself a flower
with roots in a parched ground.”
"Raleigh Was Right" (1940)
Collected Later Poems (1950)
Context: Not now. Love itself a flower
with roots in a parched ground.
Empty pockets make empty heads.
Cure it if you can but
do not believe that we can live
today in the country
for the country will bring us
no peace.
Speech in the House of Commons (16 April 1845) against the Maynooth grant, quoted in G. M. Trevelyan, The Life of John Bright (London: Constable, 1913), pp. 161-162.
1840s
“A man is a bundle of relations, a knot of roots, whose flower and fruitage is the world.”
History
Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919), Essays, First Series