The North American Review, Volume 41Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge O. Everett, 1835 Vols. 227-230, no. 2 include: Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
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Page 51
... thought a little expanded loses all its force and brilliancy . ' " Is not that your opinion ? ' " Pardon me , -that depends entirely upon what the thought is . A bon mot for example is not sufficient to fill up a sonnet , whether in ...
... thought a little expanded loses all its force and brilliancy . ' " Is not that your opinion ? ' " Pardon me , -that depends entirely upon what the thought is . A bon mot for example is not sufficient to fill up a sonnet , whether in ...
Page 371
... thought , so happily combined with the vigor and beauty of language , that are necessary to give them effect . Stewart , by far the most distinguished of the English philosophers , who have lived since Adam Smith , was a beautiful ...
... thought , so happily combined with the vigor and beauty of language , that are necessary to give them effect . Stewart , by far the most distinguished of the English philosophers , who have lived since Adam Smith , was a beautiful ...
Page 425
... thought ; a man never looks so profoundly intellectual as when he is thinking of nothing . A solitary walk , - a seat by an evening fire , are said to be favorable to thought , when sometimes , on such occasions , not a thought passes ...
... thought ; a man never looks so profoundly intellectual as when he is thinking of nothing . A solitary walk , - a seat by an evening fire , are said to be favorable to thought , when sometimes , on such occasions , not a thought passes ...
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