North-American Review and Miscellaneous Journal, Volume 8Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge O. Everett, 1965 Vols. 277-230, no. 2 include Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
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Page 177
... mind seems to exert something like a me- chanical influence over the body , or the influences of mind and body are so perfectly reciprocal , that it would be hardly possible to say , which exerted the most power . A boy at school ...
... mind seems to exert something like a me- chanical influence over the body , or the influences of mind and body are so perfectly reciprocal , that it would be hardly possible to say , which exerted the most power . A boy at school ...
Page 296
... minds , a singleness of taste , which puts aside every thing that is not modelled to its own fancy , is punished for its warring with nature by being cut off from its varieties . Yet every mind has something which it turns to as its own ...
... minds , a singleness of taste , which puts aside every thing that is not modelled to its own fancy , is punished for its warring with nature by being cut off from its varieties . Yet every mind has something which it turns to as its own ...
Page 306
... mind or turn all that is best in it into bitterness or scorn . It becomes angry with itself for its shortsightedness and folly , and finds its revenge in sneering at the world's weakness and feeling it to be greater than its own . This ...
... mind or turn all that is best in it into bitterness or scorn . It becomes angry with itself for its shortsightedness and folly , and finds its revenge in sneering at the world's weakness and feeling it to be greater than its own . This ...
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