North-American Review and Miscellaneous Journal, Volume 77Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge University of Northern Iowa, 1853 Vols. 277-230, no. 2 include Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
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Page 1
... interest , and perhaps also enhances their intrinsic merit . It is to this , perhaps , that they owe a force of purpose and character which makes them a grateful contrast to the ordinary lan- guid collectanea published by young men of ...
... interest , and perhaps also enhances their intrinsic merit . It is to this , perhaps , that they owe a force of purpose and character which makes them a grateful contrast to the ordinary lan- guid collectanea published by young men of ...
Page 35
... interests , and of interests alone ; for the nature of political association represents nothing more . Very little instruction is needed to give men a know- ledge of their own interests . Whether this union of opinion is wise or foolish ...
... interests , and of interests alone ; for the nature of political association represents nothing more . Very little instruction is needed to give men a know- ledge of their own interests . Whether this union of opinion is wise or foolish ...
Page 36
... interests in order to induce them to pursue these interests . How far this is from the truth , those who have had most ... interest is opposed to knowledge , the latter finds no better foothold now than formerly . We do not hear that the ...
... interests in order to induce them to pursue these interests . How far this is from the truth , those who have had most ... interest is opposed to knowledge , the latter finds no better foothold now than formerly . We do not hear that the ...
Page 37
... interests of the world , are possible still . Is not Europe a camp of hostile armies ? Does England attach less importance than formerly to her empire of the seas ? Is France kept down by moral suasion ? Are not the United States ...
... interests of the world , are possible still . Is not Europe a camp of hostile armies ? Does England attach less importance than formerly to her empire of the seas ? Is France kept down by moral suasion ? Are not the United States ...
Page 39
... interest of its most powerful element- always tends to the strength- ening of the strongest . Emancipation is impossible . The well of political truth is never undefiled . No despotism is so hopeless and unrelenting as the despotism of ...
... interest of its most powerful element- always tends to the strength- ening of the strongest . Emancipation is impossible . The well of political truth is never undefiled . No despotism is so hopeless and unrelenting as the despotism of ...
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