The Yale Literary Magazine, Volume 71, Issues 7-8Herrick & Noyes, 1906 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 10
Page 209
... seem absolutely justifiable to the liar ; but VOL . LXXI . 29 then it may seem absolutely unjustifiable to everybody else . THE ...
... seem absolutely justifiable to the liar ; but VOL . LXXI . 29 then it may seem absolutely unjustifiable to everybody else . THE ...
Page 210
then it may seem absolutely unjustifiable to everybody else . The theory that the end justifies the means has been dragging out a rather precarious existence during the past few thousand years . Whether it is proper to bluff in poker ...
then it may seem absolutely unjustifiable to everybody else . The theory that the end justifies the means has been dragging out a rather precarious existence during the past few thousand years . Whether it is proper to bluff in poker ...
Page 212
... seem justifiable , or at the least excusable . A man who knows more of the world than the majority of college men told me that Yale standards , the standards , the forms which are responsible for our false attitudes , are the standards ...
... seem justifiable , or at the least excusable . A man who knows more of the world than the majority of college men told me that Yale standards , the standards , the forms which are responsible for our false attitudes , are the standards ...
Page 217
... seem the proper situation in which to explain . The guide slouched on the end of the wharf , reading a paper . We dropped on a board overturned for drying , near him . A headline in the paper seemed to catch her eye . 30 “ Oh , Mr ...
... seem the proper situation in which to explain . The guide slouched on the end of the wharf , reading a paper . We dropped on a board overturned for drying , near him . A headline in the paper seemed to catch her eye . 30 “ Oh , Mr ...
Page 220
... seems all to depend on the tragic and terrible for their strength and greatness . Not half of them deal with love at all , and when they do , they derive their great- ness not from the love itself , but from the tragic and terrible with ...
... seems all to depend on the tragic and terrible for their strength and greatness . Not half of them deal with love at all , and when they do , they derive their great- ness not from the love itself , but from the tragic and terrible with ...
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