The Yale Literary Magazine, Volume 87, Issue 9Herrick & Noyes, 1922 |
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Common terms and phrases
1014 CHAPEL STREET 156 CROWN STREET 1842 Particular Drug 1913 GAMER Tailors-Haberdashers 245 ELM STREET 25th college 262 ELM STREET Adrienne Toner Beauty BEIRNE 227 Elm Black Virgin Boscoe BROS BRUNSWICK RECORDS Bukis Cabin Boy call for Rosie Chapel Street Established Conn CONNECTICUT conversation CROWN STREET dark disease Dollars a Garment dream Echo edge of town English Established 1842 Particular Established 1913 GAMER eternal eyes fiery Gates friends Gates of Fire gone Graflex HABERDASHERS Haberdashery heart hill HOURS Complete Line House of Quality Knox-Ray Company Jewelers laziness left pocket light Line of Kodaks little boy Narcissus never Open Evenings CHASE original constitution pass PHARMACY Established 1842 PLUSH ROBE road RUBBER COMPANY CHARLOTTE Sir Count Social Stationery Agents stars STREET NEW HAVEN STREET Phone Colony superficial TAILORS 1098 CHAPEL thee thou Vesta batteries ware Social Stationery Watches 970 Chapel weary Whip-poor-will Yale College YALE UNIVERSITY YORK AND ELM
Popular passages
Page 314 - To get at the eternal strength of things, And fearlessly to make strong songs of it, Is, to my mind, the mission of that man The world would call a poet. He may sing But roughly, and withal ungraciously; But if he touch to life the one right chord Wherein God's music slumbers, and awake To truth one drowsed ambition, he sings well.
Page 310 - ... That green one mostly wrops around the bread; "Tennessee Lace" I take to ride behind. Hither and yon right smart of them have fled. Inside the chest I keep my choicest kind — "Pine-Bloom" and "St. Ann's Robe" (of hickory brown), "Star of the East" (that yaller's fading down!). The Rose? I wove hit courting, long ago— Not Simon, though he's proper kind of heart — His name was Hugh — the fever laid him low— I allus keep that kiver set apart. "Rose of the Valley," he would laugh and say,...
Page 313 - What are the peculiarities of this residue? What special sense does Wordsworth exercise, and what instincts does he satisfy? What are the subjects and the motives which in him excite the imaginative faculty?