Make right the immemorial infamies, perfidious wrongs, immedicable woes?. From Wordnik.com. [Poems Teachers Ask For Selected by readers of "Normal Instructor-Primary Plans"] Reference
He learns to bear what he cannot prevent, knowing that courage and patience make tolerable immedicable ills. From Wordnik.com. [Education and the Higher Life] Reference
Even as an arrow through a cloud, darting from the string when Parthian hath poisoned it with bitter gall, Parthian or Cydonian, and sped the immedicable shaft, leaps through the swift shadow whistling and unknown; so sprung and swept to earth the daughter of Night. From Wordnik.com. [The Aeneid of Virgil] Reference
But the wounds were immedicable, as events were soon to prove. From Wordnik.com. [William Lloyd Garrison The Abolitionist] Reference
What have you got to say to me who have to bleed from an immedicable wound till the end of my life? '. From Wordnik.com. [Expositions of Holy Scripture Psalms] Reference
It keeps up a perpetual fever in my veins; it frets my immedicable wound; it is instinct with poison. From Wordnik.com. [The Last Man] Reference
The evil was so wide-spreading, so violent and immedicable, that no care, no prevention could be judged superfluous, which even added a chance to our escape. From Wordnik.com. [The Last Man] Reference
In the south, the disease, virulent and immedicable, had nearly annihilated the race of man; storm and inundation, poisonous winds and blights, filled up the measure of suffering. From Wordnik.com. [The Last Man] Reference
Underneath always an undertone of repulsion and incurable ennui ... the dark residuum of immedicable disillusion ... that what she had really wanted was love with its final expression eliminated. From Wordnik.com. [Black Oxen] Reference
The little child's element of existence becomes, in this manner, not seldom, an element of bitter wrong, and the sting of wounded justice grows in, so to speak, poisoning the soul all through, by its immedicable rancor. From Wordnik.com. [Christian Nurture.] Reference
Hitherto bibliomania has been regarded as incurable; humanity has looked upon it as the one malady whose tortures neither salve, elixir, plaster, poultice, nor pill, can ever alleviate; it has been pronounced immedicable, immitigable, and irremediable. From Wordnik.com. [Eugene Field A Study In Heredity And Contradictions]
His art sums up an epoch -- an epoch full of knowledge and the restraints of knowledge, still prone, so often, before the mechanical in life and thought; but throughout all its immedicable scepticism full of strange yearnings and visited by flickering dreams; and even in its darkest years and days still stretching out hands in love of a farther shore. From Wordnik.com. [The Dramatic Works of Gerhart Hauptmann Volume I] Reference
He thought, as I thought, that the first drop of blood shed in civil war ” in civil war between the United States and one of the States ” would prove an immedicable wound, which would end in a change of our institutions. From Wordnik.com. [General Scott]
With some deep and immedicable wound. From Wordnik.com. [Childe Harold's Pilgrimage] Reference
The immedicable soul, with heart-aches ever new. From Wordnik.com. [Childe Harold's Pilgrimage] Reference
Nor less than wounds immedicable. From Wordnik.com. [The Works of Lord Byron. Vol. 2] Reference
A sense of long immedicable tears. From Wordnik.com. [Hawthorn and Lavender with Other Verses] Reference
By alien shame's immedicable scars. From Wordnik.com. [Poems of Paul Hamilton Hayne,] Reference
That the immedicable mounds beyond. From Wordnik.com. [The Two Kings] Reference
With some deep and immedicable wound. From Wordnik.com. [Excerpts from _Childe Harold's Pilgrimage_] Reference
With some deep and immedicable wound. From Wordnik.com. [The Works of Lord Byron. Vol. 2] Reference
The immedicable soul, with heartaches ever new. '. From Wordnik.com. [The Continental Monthly, Vol. 4, No. 1, July, 1863 Devoted to Literature and National Policy] Reference
The immedicable souls, with heart-aches ever new. From Wordnik.com. [Excerpts from _Childe Harold's Pilgrimage_] Reference
Perfidious wrongs, immedicable woes?. From Wordnik.com. [Yahoo! Answers: Latest Questions] Reference
Nature's immedicable ill. From Wordnik.com. [Victories of Love] Reference
Evil, the immedicable plague, which, while. From Wordnik.com. [The Complete Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley — Volume 1] Reference
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