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Unrest   /ənrˈɛst/   Listen
noun
Unrest  n.  Want of rest or repose; unquietness; sleeplessness; uneasiness; disquietude. "Is this, quoth she, the cause of your unrest!" "Can calm despair and wild unrest Be tenants of a single breast?"






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Unrest" Quotes from Famous Books



... between that statue of Balzac and this statue of which I am to tell you. Both induce, above all, a profound sense of unrest, of heroic will to overcome all obstacles. The will to compass self-expression, the will to emerge from darkness to light, from formlessness to form, from nothing to everything—this it is that I find in either statue; and this it is in virtue of which the ...
— And Even Now - Essays • Max Beerbohm

... live. The only thought which makes me shrink from the notion of suicide is the apprehension that to this life another might succeed, as full of storm, of strife, of disappointment, difficulty, and unrest as this; and with that uncertainty overshadowing it, death has not much to recommend it. It is poor Hamlet's "perchance" that is the knot of the whole question, never here ...
— Records of Later Life • Frances Anne Kemble

... new social unrest, the transformation of society which it portends and the social catastrophe which it ...
— Winsome Winnie and other New Nonsense Novels • Stephen Leacock

... destiny be affected by the mood of an idle moment; by some superficial indecision, mere fruit of a transient unrest. We lightly debate, we hesitate, we yawn, unconscious of the brink. We half-heartedly decline a suggested course, then lightly accept from sheer ennui, and "life," as I have read in a quite meritorious poem, "is never the same again." It was thus I now toyed there with my fate in ...
— Ruggles of Red Gap • Harry Leon Wilson

... Gaites with her. If he saw what Birkwall had meant in marrying her, and settling down to his literary life with her in the atmosphere of such a quiet place as Burymouth, when he might have chosen money and unrest in New York, she on her side saw what her husband meant in liking the shrewd, able fellow who had such a vein of gay romance in his practicality, and such an intelligent and respectful sympathy with her ...
— A Pair of Patient Lovers • William Dean Howells


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