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All fruit-bearing plants, however, after fruitage, either shed or change the colour of their leaves.
Now he had not observed them as he went in, but all these trees bare for fruitage costly gems.
This the dire fruitage of your brother-strife!
Brown states, "It has been a year of very limited spiritual fruitage, and great destitution, the church has fallen asleep".
A man is a bundle of relations, a knot of roots, whose flower and fruitage is the world.
Salvation is all of grace and not of works, but its fruitage is obedience to the Commandments.
Bolivar viewed including blacks as a way of diminishing the population and keeping Venezuela a fruitage of white men.
In isolation the finer parts of nature wither; in fellowship they bear noble fruitage.
The last 100 pages of Science and Health (chapter entitled "Fruitage") contains testimonies of people who claimed to have been healed by reading her book.
It is the fruitage of work, not the wild play of undirected energy, which gives an epoch its decisive influence and a man his place and power.
She plucked a branch above her head; With rarest fruitage laden: "Drink of the juice, Sir Knight," she said: "'Tis good for knight and maiden."
"The friar Alberigo," answered he, "Am I, who from the evil garden pluck'd Its fruitage, and am here repaid, the date More luscious for my fig."
No want was there of human sustenance, Soft fruitage, mighty nuts, and nourishing roots; Nor save for pity was it hard to take The helpless life so wild that it was tame.
Truth of any kind breeds ever new and better truth; thus hard granite rock will crumble down into soil, under the blessed skyey influences; and cover itself with verdure, with fruitage and umbrage.
The chance remark of a sweetheart, "I hear that you are a coward," may water a seed that shall sprout and bloom and flourish, and ended in producing a surprising fruitage--in the fields of war.
He sang of war in the warm wet shires, Where rain nor fruitage fails, Where England of the motley states Deepens like a garden to the gates In the purple walls of Wales.
"He made him ride on the high places of the earth, and he did eat the fruitage of the field; and He made him to suck honey out of the crag, and oil out of the flinty rock" (Deuteronomy 32,13).
The final section, "Fruitage", consists of letters written by 84 individuals who said they had been healed - simply by reading the book - of conditions such as rheumatism, a 50lb fibroid tumor, cataract, cancer, eczema, asthma, and addictions to tobacco and alcohol.
Speaking to his people, a "White Chief" describes how "by our heaven-blest industry we have dammed the river and utilized its waters and turned the desert into smiling fields whose fruitage makes prosperous and happy a thousand homes where poverty and hunger dwelt before.
But soon they ceas'd; for midway of the road A tree we found, with goodly fruitage hung, And pleasant to the smell: and as a fir Upward from bough to bough less ample spreads, So downward this less ample spread, that none.
This, the traditional victorious white view of the American West, is followed by the statement of an "Indian Chief" to his people: "This wide plain, which the Spanish priests taught our fathers to irrigate, was a smiling field, whose fruitage made our homes prosperous and happy.
He will not say, with the extreme Nominalists, that because grain can be differentiated into all sorts of fruitage, or grass trodden into mire with any kind of weed, therefore there can be no classification to distinguish weeds from slime or to draw a fine distinction between cattle-food and cattle.
Marcus surprised her considerably by saying why not wire, and surprised her still further by constructing, from fine gold and silver wire, a whole series of stars, hexagons, starry hollow globes and complex polyhedrons, an abstract fruitage which glittered brightly, weaving threads of light among the dark threads of the needles.