The North American Review, Volume 104Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge O. Everett, 1867 Vols. 227-230, no. 2 include: Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
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Page 109
... mind was fed chiefly upon past acquisitions . There is nothing in his later efforts which shows any intellectual advance , nothing from which we can in- fer that he had been browsing in forests before untrodden , or feeding in pastures ...
... mind was fed chiefly upon past acquisitions . There is nothing in his later efforts which shows any intellectual advance , nothing from which we can in- fer that he had been browsing in forests before untrodden , or feeding in pastures ...
Page 278
... mind , however well trained in literary ortho- doxy , begins to " First endure , then pity , then embrace . " And the best of it is that , after one cordial embrace , the most friendly feeling springs up between author and reader . The ...
... mind , however well trained in literary ortho- doxy , begins to " First endure , then pity , then embrace . " And the best of it is that , after one cordial embrace , the most friendly feeling springs up between author and reader . The ...
Page 617
... mind , and to liberation from petty and distorted views , we should ascribe it to the seclusion for a considerable period at the most susceptive time of life from immediate contact with the " practical " spirit , and to the subjec- tion ...
... mind , and to liberation from petty and distorted views , we should ascribe it to the seclusion for a considerable period at the most susceptive time of life from immediate contact with the " practical " spirit , and to the subjec- tion ...
Contents
DANIEL WEBSTER | 65 |
THE SOURCES OF THE NILE | 122 |
THE OFFICE AND INFLUENCE OF CLOTHES | 156 |
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