The Yale Literary Magazine, Bind 19,Oplag 8Herrick & Noyes, 1854 |
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Side 292
... gave a bent to his mind which seems to have weakened its grasp , and even the Editor tells us that one of his greatest faults as a Statesman , was that his tastes were too exclusively literary . Sheridan passed for a dull boy at school ...
... gave a bent to his mind which seems to have weakened its grasp , and even the Editor tells us that one of his greatest faults as a Statesman , was that his tastes were too exclusively literary . Sheridan passed for a dull boy at school ...
Side 298
... gave to the poet shapes of beauty and of power ; im- agination was the highest realm to which a soaring genius could aspire . Each poet formed for himself an Ideal ; and strove to inspire it , like the statue of Pygmalion , with actual ...
... gave to the poet shapes of beauty and of power ; im- agination was the highest realm to which a soaring genius could aspire . Each poet formed for himself an Ideal ; and strove to inspire it , like the statue of Pygmalion , with actual ...
Side 306
... gave evidence . The elder of the two , a tall , dark - complexioned youth , was leaning carelessly against the trunk , grasping his rifle in one hand , while with the other he played with the tassel of his hunting - pouch . His ...
... gave evidence . The elder of the two , a tall , dark - complexioned youth , was leaning carelessly against the trunk , grasping his rifle in one hand , while with the other he played with the tassel of his hunting - pouch . His ...
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1st Prize 2d Division 2d Prize 3d Division 3d Prize Archie Aristotle Augsburg Bartholomew beauty bold British Eloquence brother Burke calm character characteristics Charles Lamb charmed Chatham Cicero Class classic College critic Cuba Curfew Bell Danbury Depew Deus divine Editor England essays face faith fame fault feel genius gentle give Goethe Grandame Grange greatest hall heart hero highest honor human imagination immortal influence labors Lamb Lamb's learned literary Luther Mass Massa Melancthon Metaphysical poetry Milton mind moral nature never o'er old Horace orators passing passion peculiar Percival philosophical Pitt Plato poet poetry political possessed Poughkeepsie Protectorate of Cromwell reform reget reputation scenes scholar seems Sheridan sister soul speeches spirit stern strong sweet Tennyson thought tion tree true trust truth virtues voice wild Wordsworth write Yale York City youth