The Yale Literary Magazine, Bind 60,Oplag 1–3Yale Literary Society, 1894 |
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Side 4
... fact which is undoubtedly due to the unchange- able customs and traditions of the place . Comparatively few of us when we come here have many friends . The minority who come to Yale from the large public schools in a body , and who both ...
... fact which is undoubtedly due to the unchange- able customs and traditions of the place . Comparatively few of us when we come here have many friends . The minority who come to Yale from the large public schools in a body , and who both ...
Side 5
... fact that he isn't much of a man . " The cynical , and in some ways almost tragical , remark which the English playwright , Mr. Henry Arthur Jones , makes one of his characters utter- " Good God ! I think we are all mas- querading ...
... fact that he isn't much of a man . " The cynical , and in some ways almost tragical , remark which the English playwright , Mr. Henry Arthur Jones , makes one of his characters utter- " Good God ! I think we are all mas- querading ...
Side 6
as well as the individual , lies in the fact that we have here no hard and fast rules for judging men , nor any fixed impressions as to right and wrong , for we judge each man by unformulated , unwritten rules which seem to fit his case ...
as well as the individual , lies in the fact that we have here no hard and fast rules for judging men , nor any fixed impressions as to right and wrong , for we judge each man by unformulated , unwritten rules which seem to fit his case ...
Side 9
... facts of life , present- ing vice in all its hideousness , not masking it so that it becomes attractive . To him ignorance and innocence are not synonyms , nor does he believe that knowledge of dis- ease prompts the surgeon to love it ...
... facts of life , present- ing vice in all its hideousness , not masking it so that it becomes attractive . To him ignorance and innocence are not synonyms , nor does he believe that knowledge of dis- ease prompts the surgeon to love it ...
Side 10
... fact that he had not fully carried out his aim -- for it was French nature , not human nature , that he had painted - spite of the frag- mentary character and imperfections of the " Comédie Humaine , " Balzac is perhaps the greatest ...
... fact that he had not fully carried out his aim -- for it was French nature , not human nature , that he had painted - spite of the frag- mentary character and imperfections of the " Comédie Humaine , " Balzac is perhaps the greatest ...
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Agent American Aratil artistic Athletic Balzac beautiful Boston Bowdoin Orient Center Street CHAPEL ST Chapel Street character CHARLES CHENEY HYDE charming Chauncey Wetmore Church Street CLAIR TUNNEL Clothing Clyde S. S. Co Columbia Bicycle CONN corner criticism DICTIONARY door Dress Suit Edited Editors eyes F. B. Sanborn Foot Ball friends G. P. Putnam's Sons gaze Ginn & Company girl gossip Gymnasium hand Haven House heart Holmes Houghton IMPORTING TAILOR interesting lady legislative letters light live looked MACKINTOSHES Magazine Magee Meakim Merchant Tailors Mifflin Mifflin & Company Minnesingers Music nature never Nifty night O'Rourke Patsey perhaps Photographers play poems poet Price reader rose ROUTE Maine School seemed Shoes smile song Specialty story Students style sweet thing tion to-day tobacco Trilby volume WASHBURN GUITAR window YALE LITERARY York