The Yale Literary Magazine, Bind 19,Oplag 8Herrick & Noyes, 1854 |
Fra bogen
Resultater 1-3 af 4
Side 294
greatest sincerity of motive , and purity of aim . His private letters , which open to us the real character of the ... letter to his intimate friend , Fitz Patrick , the simplicity and truthfulness of which , shows that it was never ...
greatest sincerity of motive , and purity of aim . His private letters , which open to us the real character of the ... letter to his intimate friend , Fitz Patrick , the simplicity and truthfulness of which , shows that it was never ...
Side 312
... letters ; and indeed this natural ease is one of their greatest charms . In them character is as conspicuous as in a diary or familiar letters or daily conversation . They are not heavy substantial cloths woven of close logic , and high ...
... letters ; and indeed this natural ease is one of their greatest charms . In them character is as conspicuous as in a diary or familiar letters or daily conversation . They are not heavy substantial cloths woven of close logic , and high ...
Side 314
... letters denote that there was some foundation for the charge , but making allowance for his convivial temperament and consti- tutional predisposition to such excitement , there is nothing to warrant the excessive abuse that has been ...
... letters denote that there was some foundation for the charge , but making allowance for his convivial temperament and consti- tutional predisposition to such excitement , there is nothing to warrant the excessive abuse that has been ...
Andre udgaver - Se alle
Almindelige termer og sætninger
1st Prize 3d Division 3d Prize appearance Archie Aristotle Augsburg 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 grove hall hand 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 remember reputation scenes scholar seems Sheridan soul speeches spirit stern strong sweet tender Tennyson thought tion toil tree true trust truth virtues voice wild Wordsworth write Yale York City youth