The Yale Literary Magazine, Volume 19, Issue 8Herrick & Noyes, 1854 |
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Page 292
... learned that any of them carried off the highest honor of his class . If such had been the case their biographers would surely have laid great stress upon it ; for nothing usually delights such a one more that to obtain facts indicating ...
... learned that any of them carried off the highest honor of his class . If such had been the case their biographers would surely have laid great stress upon it ; for nothing usually delights such a one more that to obtain facts indicating ...
Page 293
... learned from examples , " and in the whole College course , he can find no book so val- uable to him as this of which we write . We by no means underrate the importance of study ; indeed , all to whom we refer , performed during their ...
... learned from examples , " and in the whole College course , he can find no book so val- uable to him as this of which we write . We by no means underrate the importance of study ; indeed , all to whom we refer , performed during their ...
Page 328
... learned critics in this weather . It is hot enough wholly to disarm criticism . Think of a person's venturing upon a severe review , when the thermometer is 90 ° in the shade ! We are often asked the question , who gets out the next ...
... learned critics in this weather . It is hot enough wholly to disarm criticism . Think of a person's venturing upon a severe review , when the thermometer is 90 ° in the shade ! We are often asked the question , who gets out the next ...
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