The North American Review, Volume 83Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge O. Everett, 1856 Vols. 227-230, no. 2 include: Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
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Page 261
... genius which that work had created . They could not identify the heroine with the author . The present volume , we think , will go far to relieve that dis- appointment , and to justify the portraiture of the Memoirs ; partly be- cause ...
... genius which that work had created . They could not identify the heroine with the author . The present volume , we think , will go far to relieve that dis- appointment , and to justify the portraiture of the Memoirs ; partly be- cause ...
Page 452
... Genius to the welfare of others . Speaking of Charles Dickens , to whom he grants the highest rank as a literary artist , he says : - - " Mr. Dickens has no more business with the rabble than a seraph with a chapeau de bras . The ...
... Genius to the welfare of others . Speaking of Charles Dickens , to whom he grants the highest rank as a literary artist , he says : - - " Mr. Dickens has no more business with the rabble than a seraph with a chapeau de bras . The ...
Page 519
... genius and unforced achievement in art . The student of human nature finds it far more freely open to his scrutiny , and with wider diversities of type , in Paris than in London . The lover of society can with less of ceremony , and ...
... genius and unforced achievement in art . The student of human nature finds it far more freely open to his scrutiny , and with wider diversities of type , in Paris than in London . The lover of society can with less of ceremony , and ...
Contents
DAMASCUS | 30 |
BONDS GENEALOGIES OF WATERTOWN | 52 |
THE PRESENT AND FUTURE OF AMERICAN ART | 84 |
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