The Yale Literary Magazine, Bind 59 |
Fra bogen
Resultater 1-5 af 34
Side 10
Renan interests us because he embodies supremely one attitude of mind of men of thought in his time — a state of mind he did much himself to create . The faith of these men is lost . They are forced to hold science alone as certainty .
Renan interests us because he embodies supremely one attitude of mind of men of thought in his time — a state of mind he did much himself to create . The faith of these men is lost . They are forced to hold science alone as certainty .
Side 11
Renan approached the problem , of our life in much the same way as a greater and stronger mind of his own time approached them . The answer which Matthew Arnold and Renan give is the same . “ We cannot believe , for we do not know .
Renan approached the problem , of our life in much the same way as a greater and stronger mind of his own time approached them . The answer which Matthew Arnold and Renan give is the same . “ We cannot believe , for we do not know .
Side 14
The words seemed to run in his mind in a kind of rhyme : once he actually found himself singing them . There came a rap at the door . “ Letter for you , Sandy Doane ; I d'n ' know where from . " The old man and took the envelope almost ...
The words seemed to run in his mind in a kind of rhyme : once he actually found himself singing them . There came a rap at the door . “ Letter for you , Sandy Doane ; I d'n ' know where from . " The old man and took the envelope almost ...
Side 17
Each verse has its own lesson and seems to come from the mind of a teacher who speaks with authority , writing from his own experience . The lessons do not impress one as didactic or sarcastic . In his “ Field Notes " he writes : " I ...
Each verse has its own lesson and seems to come from the mind of a teacher who speaks with authority , writing from his own experience . The lessons do not impress one as didactic or sarcastic . In his “ Field Notes " he writes : " I ...
Side 18
But the point which Mr. Sill evidently had first in mind , and one which constantly recurs in his philosophical verses , is the necessity and value of work , work in new fields , and work which should mean the fullest and most intense ...
But the point which Mr. Sill evidently had first in mind , and one which constantly recurs in his philosophical verses , is the necessity and value of work , work in new fields , and work which should mean the fullest and most intense ...
Hvad folk siger - Skriv en anmeldelse
Vi har ikke fundet nogen anmeldelser de normale steder.
Andre udgaver - Se alle
Almindelige termer og sætninger
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