North-American Review and Miscellaneous Journal, Volume 12Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge Wells and Lilly, 1821 Vols. 277-230, no. 2 include Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
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Page 2
... mind in private life , to decide intrusively and peremptorily on personal affairs , which do not concern us , and which we do not understand , we see not what can apologize for that ferocious spirit of censure , which sweeps through a ...
... mind in private life , to decide intrusively and peremptorily on personal affairs , which do not concern us , and which we do not understand , we see not what can apologize for that ferocious spirit of censure , which sweeps through a ...
Page 3
... mind that must be caught involuntarily , in a two or three years ' abode at an academical city , still to have redeemed so much time from the saloons and the worse than saloons of the metropolis , is enough . No one can doubt that the ...
... mind that must be caught involuntarily , in a two or three years ' abode at an academical city , still to have redeemed so much time from the saloons and the worse than saloons of the metropolis , is enough . No one can doubt that the ...
Page 11
... mind has made and is making , among our fellow men . One great blow to the universality of the Latin as a learned language , was abolishing the practice of lecturing in it , in the German universities . This was first done by Thomasius ...
... mind has made and is making , among our fellow men . One great blow to the universality of the Latin as a learned language , was abolishing the practice of lecturing in it , in the German universities . This was first done by Thomasius ...
Page 14
... mind will not be so violated and defied . Genius never meant and never will mean the power of work- ing without means , without time , and without pause ; nor was it ever given to mortal man to scribble off with a flying pen , what ...
... mind will not be so violated and defied . Genius never meant and never will mean the power of work- ing without means , without time , and without pause ; nor was it ever given to mortal man to scribble off with a flying pen , what ...
Page 32
... mind , and preserving a purity of manners , than by opening direct and profitable channels of trade . Industry may then look for its amplest rewards ; and in a country like ours , it will inev- itably be attended with its concomitant ...
... mind , and preserving a purity of manners , than by opening direct and profitable channels of trade . Industry may then look for its amplest rewards ; and in a country like ours , it will inev- itably be attended with its concomitant ...
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