The Yale Literary Magazine, Volume 85Yale Literary Society, 1919 |
From inside the book
Results 6-10 of 46
Page 131
... falling on the iron flooring was knocked unconscious . " I did not come to until a long while after . I was sick and weak in my bunk for a day or two more . All this time we had been lying on the bottom of the German Ocean . The steward ...
... falling on the iron flooring was knocked unconscious . " I did not come to until a long while after . I was sick and weak in my bunk for a day or two more . All this time we had been lying on the bottom of the German Ocean . The steward ...
Page 150
... fall short . We expect with a large degree of justification that with given personalities and given circumstances we shall have a really sharp idea what course of action each character will follow . This expectation Mr. Con- rad refuses ...
... fall short . We expect with a large degree of justification that with given personalities and given circumstances we shall have a really sharp idea what course of action each character will follow . This expectation Mr. Con- rad refuses ...
Page 170
... falls down . This brings us into something of a vicious circle . The uni- versity is the resultant of the nation , but the nation is at the same time the resultant of the university . If we accept a purely de- terministic view , there ...
... falls down . This brings us into something of a vicious circle . The uni- versity is the resultant of the nation , but the nation is at the same time the resultant of the university . If we accept a purely de- terministic view , there ...
Page 179
... fall under his hands , he is very likely to run across something that will present the early conceptions of the origin of life . To the Greek philosopher the important question was not that of his own descent , but rather that of his ...
... fall under his hands , he is very likely to run across something that will present the early conceptions of the origin of life . To the Greek philosopher the important question was not that of his own descent , but rather that of his ...
Page 188
... fall toward the earth becomes incandescent all over its surface and any seeds on it would therefore be de- prived of their germinating power . " In presenting a substitute for Kelvin's meteorite he points out that for particles below a ...
... fall toward the earth becomes incandescent all over its surface and any seeds on it would therefore be de- prived of their germinating power . " In presenting a substitute for Kelvin's meteorite he points out that for particles below a ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
asked beautiful Black Orchid CHAPEL STREET clothes College Company CONN course Cyril Hume DABNEY dark dead DEXTER Dintera door dream Elaine Electric eyes face feel FLORA Fritz girl Greek grey hair hall hand HAROLD STARK head hear heart HIGH STREET interest John KEETER knew Lafcadio Hearn laugh leave light Little Nemo living looked MAGNUS métec Michaelson Mikado mind MISS FLECKER NESTOR never night Patek Philippe Pencil perhaps Purple Bird Roger Sherman Roger Sherman Studio Saxon Kling seemed ship silent sitting smile soul stairs stand stopped strange STREET NEW HAVEN suddenly Tailor tell things thought to-day turned Ugfraud Verse Vivian Tobin voice watching wind window woman write YALE LITERARY MAGAZINE Yale Publishing Association Yale University York young