OCR Text |
Show Gems of cfooitQbtl EXPECTANCY Ail earthly delights are sweeter sweet-er in expectation than in enjoy-J mem; but all spiritual pleasures j more in fruition than in expecta-1 tion. Feltham. j We part more easily with what we possess than with our expectations expecta-tions of what we hope for, expec. tation always goes beyond enjoyment. enjoy-ment. Home. When the destination is desirable, desir-able, expectation speeds our progress. pro-gress. Mary Baker Eddy. With regard to one's work the desirable feeling is always to expect ex-pect to succeed and never to think you have succeeded. Thomas Arnold. Ar-nold. The little done vanishes from the sight of him who looks for-iWard for-iWard to what is still to do. Goethe. By every part of our nature we clasp things above us, one after another, not for the sake of remaining re-maining where we take hold, but that we may go higher. H. W. Beecher. |