To the woman with general intelligence is assigned the lowest drudgery of intellectuallabour.
2
So that intellectuallabour is not, necessarily, unfavourable to longevity.
3
But in intellectuallabour there is another charm-webecome more intimate with our own nature.
4
We cannot obtain Intuition without intellectuallabour, for it must have an intellectual or scientific basis.
5
He possessed in an extraordinary degree the power of continuous intellectuallabour, nor did he spare himself.
6
Southward, beyond the river, was the city of study, of intellectuallabour, so calm, so perfectly serene.
7
Hopeless indeed is the position of that woman who brings into the intellectuallabour market nothing but general intelligence.
8
And here is excellent advice as to the fashion in which men may hope to get through great intellectuallabour: says Ellesmere,-
9
Then, too, he recoiled from Francois' purely intellectuallabour, for he himself had scarcely emerged from the harrowing study of conflicting texts.
10
The position of a man who wished to live by intellectuallabour was far from easy at that time and not always dignified.
11
Thus habitual idleness gains too much power to be conquered, and the soul shrinks from the idea of intellectuallabour and intenseness of meditation.
12
In complexity and difficulty, I should say that the intellectuallabour of a "good hunter or warrior" considerably exceeds that of an ordinary Englishman.
13
The males absorbed the intellectuallabours of life; slaves and dependents the physical.
14
It was a common argument at the time, at least in intellectualLabour circles.
15
Three among these-thegreatest scholars that Japan ever produced-especiallyprepared the way, by their intellectuallabours, for the abolition of the Shogunate.