The Yale Literary Magazine, Bind 59 |
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Side
All subscriptions must be paid in advance , directly to the Editors , who alone can give receipts therefor . Upon the day of publication the Magazine is promptly mailed to all subscribers . Single numbers are on sale at the Coöperative ...
All subscriptions must be paid in advance , directly to the Editors , who alone can give receipts therefor . Upon the day of publication the Magazine is promptly mailed to all subscribers . Single numbers are on sale at the Coöperative ...
Side 5
If it has merit enough to give it a reason for existence , its value will be more in the gifts which the writers receive from the labor necessary to produce writing of merit , in increase of literary knowledge and training of thought ...
If it has merit enough to give it a reason for existence , its value will be more in the gifts which the writers receive from the labor necessary to produce writing of merit , in increase of literary knowledge and training of thought ...
Side 10
Let us give ourselves to the present , the actual in life ; change the subject and ask no more idle questions about its meaning . " These men cannot help clinging to vague dreams and hopes , that are really but echoes of a faith they ...
Let us give ourselves to the present , the actual in life ; change the subject and ask no more idle questions about its meaning . " These men cannot help clinging to vague dreams and hopes , that are really but echoes of a faith they ...
Side 11
The answer which Matthew Arnold and Renan give is the same . “ We cannot believe , for we do not know . Science reveals to us no God . We must take our lives without him . ” The despair of these men at discovering truth about the ...
The answer which Matthew Arnold and Renan give is the same . “ We cannot believe , for we do not know . Science reveals to us no God . We must take our lives without him . ” The despair of these men at discovering truth about the ...
Side 15
His own denial moreover , of any affiliation with the class of so - called poets , puts the man in a strange contrast with others gifted with poetical genius , a contrast which gives Mr. Sill the finer attitude .
His own denial moreover , of any affiliation with the class of so - called poets , puts the man in a strange contrast with others gifted with poetical genius , a contrast which gives Mr. Sill the finer attitude .
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American appear artistic beauty believe Boston called Chapel Street character church close Clothing comes Company course criticism death door early Editors England English expression eyes face fact feeling followed foot friends give given half Hall hand Harvard Haven head heart hope important interesting John kind lamp learning less letters light literary literature living look matter meaning mind Music nature never night notice once Opposite passed past perhaps picture play present Princeton Professor reason seems shows side spirit stand stone story student style success sure tell things thought tion town true turn University whole Window writing written Yale York young