The Yale Literary Magazine, Volume 59Yale Literary Society, 1893 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 30
Page 6
... stands no more in- teresting figure than that of Ernest Renan . It seems such an odd irony of fate by which a man born in an at- mosphere of sentiment and devoutness , and trained in the quiet cloisters of religious houses , should be ...
... stands no more in- teresting figure than that of Ernest Renan . It seems such an odd irony of fate by which a man born in an at- mosphere of sentiment and devoutness , and trained in the quiet cloisters of religious houses , should be ...
Page 7
... stands listening , as he said , to the faint chiming of the church bells , calling to holy offices a worshiper who refuses to hear them . Do what he would , those echoes of his early self kept ringing in his ears , till his skepticism ...
... stands listening , as he said , to the faint chiming of the church bells , calling to holy offices a worshiper who refuses to hear them . Do what he would , those echoes of his early self kept ringing in his ears , till his skepticism ...
Page 14
... standing huddled before the door . Andrew raised the latch and entered the lonely place , followed cautiously by the others . Andrew looked up from a letter which he had found on the floor ; his face looked old and drawn . " Men , " he ...
... standing huddled before the door . Andrew raised the latch and entered the lonely place , followed cautiously by the others . Andrew looked up from a letter which he had found on the floor ; his face looked old and drawn . " Men , " he ...
Page 15
... stand seem to be justified by what he did . His poems were written for his friends rather than for publication , and if they appeared in print , oftentimes it was in an obscure periodical , or under a pseudonym . Above all , his poems ...
... stand seem to be justified by what he did . His poems were written for his friends rather than for publication , and if they appeared in print , oftentimes it was in an obscure periodical , or under a pseudonym . Above all , his poems ...
Page 16
... stand for themselves , and in themselves excel the nicest praise of critics . All that one can do is to analyze them and to appreciate their variety and charm . The greater part of Mr. Sill's poetry is confined to two themes - the ...
... stand for themselves , and in themselves excel the nicest praise of critics . All that one can do is to analyze them and to appreciate their variety and charm . The greater part of Mr. Sill's poetry is confined to two themes - the ...
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