Lexicographical Neighbors of Inwardnesses
Literary usage of Inwardnesses
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Portraits of American Women by Gamaliel Bradford (1919)
"50 She even confesses with admirable frankness that it hurt her to be excelled
by others. "I have odious little 'inwardnesses' of discomfort when distanced. ..."
2. Glimpses of Fifty Years: The Autobiography of an American Woman by Frances Elizabeth Willard (1889)
"Still, with it all, I have odious little " inwardnesses " of discomfort when
distanced, as one must be so often, and my only consolation at such times, ..."
3. Modern Music and Musicians by Louis Charles Elson (1918)
"It was full of the fervor of beautiful ideals, of fancies tender and subtle, of
elevating aspirations, and of all such human inwardnesses as had a touch of ..."
4. The Sermons of Henry Ward Beecher in Plymouth Church, Brooklyn by Henry Ward Beecher (1873)
"And are we to take these precious inwardnesses of men which are imbedded in their
labor, and to think of them only in the poor, pitiful light of pelf, ..."
5. The Various Writings of Cornelius Mathews by Cornelius Mathews (1863)
"... recurrence of the phrases a " oneness," an " obscure and unreachable infinite," "
divergence toward central orbits," and " revolutionary inwardnesses"— ..."
6. University Musical Encyclopedia by Louis Charles Elson (1912)
"... of fancies tender and subtle, of elevating aspirations, and of all such human
inwardnesses as had a touch of distinction and even of sacredness, ..."
7. Annual Convention by Central Conference of American Rabbis (1891)
"He must go to the root principles, the ground forms of all theories beliefs and
teachings; see into their inwardnesses and implications as far as mind might ..."
8. Plymouth Pulpit: A Weekly Publication of Sermons Preached by Henry Ward Beecher by Henry Ward Beecher (1869)
"And are we to take these precious inwardnesses of men which are imbedded in their
labor, and to think of them only in the poor, pitiful light of pelf, ..."