Synthesized answer
The provided passages do not contain any evidence or information directly related to the book *For Whom the Bell Tolls* by Ernest Hemingway. Instead, the passages consist entirely of biblical citations and a religious meditation (likely from a sermon or devotional work by John Donne), with references to scripture such as John, Psalms, and Isaiah [1][2][3][4][5].
The passages discuss themes like the communication of happiness from God to men [4], the treatment of rich versus poor speakers [4], and prayers for preservation from sin [5]. However, none of these passages provide evidence about characters, plot, setting, or themes from Hemingway's novel. Therefore, based solely on the given text, the question cannot be answered.
Synthesized from the book passages below. Chat with the book on Feynman for follow-up.
From the book
↑ John, xi. 23. ↑ Num. xxiii. 9. ↑ Deut. xxxiii. 28. ↑ Eccles. iv. 10. ↑ Wisd. i. 15. ↑ Matt. xiv. 23. ↑ Matt. xxvi. 13. ↑ John, viii. 16. ↑ Psalm xxxviii. 11. ↑ Isaiah lxii. 3. ↑ 1 Kings, xiv. 14. ↑ Luke, x. 40. ↑ Jer. i. 1. ↑ Lev. xiii. 46. ↑ Exod. xiv. 2. ↑ Gen. xxxii. 24. 25. ↑ Ecclus. vi. 16.
5; liii. 5. ↑ John, vii. 13; xix. 38; xxix. 19. ↑ Isaiah, xxxiii. 6. ↑ Matt. viii. 26. ↑ Judges, vii. 3. ↑ Rev. xxi. 8. ↑ Job, vi. 20. ↑ Matt. xxviii. 8. ↑ Psalm cxi. 10. ↑ Prov. i. 7. ↑ Ecclus. i. 20, 27. ↑ Deut. iv. 10. ↑ Heb. xi. 7. ↑ Ecclus. xviii. 27.
. 13. ↑ Amos, vi. 4. ↑ Psalm cxxxii. 3. ↑ Rev. ii. 22. ↑ Matt. viii. 6. ↑ Matt. viii. 4. ↑ Matt. viii. 14. ↑ Psalm xxvi. 8. ↑ Psalm lxxxiv. 4. ↑ Psalm v. 7. ↑ Psalm lxix. 9. ↑ 1 Cor. ix. 27. ↑ 2 Kings, ii. 11. ↑ Exodus, xxi. 18. ↑ Psalm xli. 3. ↑ Psalm iv. 4.
ey descend, as God, to a communication of their abundances with men, according to their necessities, then they are gods. No man is well that understands not, that values not his being well; that hath not a cheertulness and a joy in it; and whosoever hath this joy, hath a desire to communicate, to propagate that which occasions his happiness and his joy to others; for every man loves witnesses of his happiness, and the best witnesses arc experimental witnesses; they who have tasted of that in themselves which makes us happy: it consummates therefove, it perfects the happiness of kings, to…
ice then, and fly to thee, thou wilt preserve me from falling, or raise me again, when by natural infirmity I am fallen. Do this, O Lord, for his sake, who knows our natural infirmities, for he had them, and knows the weight of our sins, for he paid a dear price for them, thy Son, our Saviour, Christ Jesus. Amen. ↑ Matt. xiii. 16. ↑ 2 Kings, iv. 40. ↑ Prov. xiii. 17. ↑ Isaiah, lviii. 8.