The Bookman, Volume 14Dodd, Mead and Company, 1902 |
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Page v
... given by the mu- nificent Faneuil . Bynner's " Agnes Surriage " The Harvard Bridge The home of Mrs. Harrison Gray Otis . -Mrs . L. C. Moulton's " Miss Eyre " . The home of Mrs. Louise Chandler Moul- ton . Margaret Allston's ' Boston Ex ...
... given by the mu- nificent Faneuil . Bynner's " Agnes Surriage " The Harvard Bridge The home of Mrs. Harrison Gray Otis . -Mrs . L. C. Moulton's " Miss Eyre " . The home of Mrs. Louise Chandler Moul- ton . Margaret Allston's ' Boston Ex ...
Page 10
... given them in the best of good faith by an indulgent father . How much of the pitiless snobbishness which held little New England prigs aloof from them was due to his ill - repute as a sus- pected atheist it would be difficult to say ...
... given them in the best of good faith by an indulgent father . How much of the pitiless snobbishness which held little New England prigs aloof from them was due to his ill - repute as a sus- pected atheist it would be difficult to say ...
Page 15
... given us a great American novel nor anything like one , but with one or two . exceptions all these books have been clever and wholesome and readable , and some day just such an experiment as this may bring forth a great novel . None of ...
... given us a great American novel nor anything like one , but with one or two . exceptions all these books have been clever and wholesome and readable , and some day just such an experiment as this may bring forth a great novel . None of ...
Page 19
... given place to grimy fac- tories . The fair grounds are still in the immediate neighbourhood , forty years . ago " a receiving camp . for the crude but eager requirements of the Northern States . To Mr. Brinsmade when the day's duty was ...
... given place to grimy fac- tories . The fair grounds are still in the immediate neighbourhood , forty years . ago " a receiving camp . for the crude but eager requirements of the Northern States . To Mr. Brinsmade when the day's duty was ...
Page 21
... given us a happier insight into the poet's habit of thought than is contained in this cele- brated mock of " Childe Harold " ? For what is Hamlet but a hare in March ? And what is Brutus but a croaking owl ? And what is Rolla ? Cupid ...
... given us a happier insight into the poet's habit of thought than is contained in this cele- brated mock of " Childe Harold " ? For what is Hamlet but a hare in March ? And what is Brutus but a croaking owl ? And what is Rolla ? Cupid ...
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