Four Americans: Roosevelt, Hawthorne, Emerson, WhitmanYale review, 1919 - 90 sider |
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Side 14
... intellectual élite of France ; and he warns it against the besetting sin of university dons and the learned and lettered class in general , a supercilious , patronizing attitude towards . the men of action who are doing the rough work ...
... intellectual élite of France ; and he warns it against the besetting sin of university dons and the learned and lettered class in general , a supercilious , patronizing attitude towards . the men of action who are doing the rough work ...
Side 16
... intellectual brilliancy , but of his strong character , his immense practical sagacity and common sense , his leadership of men . As to Lincoln , we know through what cold obstruction he struggled up into the light , educating himself ...
... intellectual brilliancy , but of his strong character , his immense practical sagacity and common sense , his leadership of men . As to Lincoln , we know through what cold obstruction he struggled up into the light , educating himself ...
Side 51
... intellectual equals . He did not meet Carlyle , Dickens , Thack- eray , Tennyson , Mill , Grote , Charles Reade , George Eliot , or any other first - class minds . He barely met the Brownings , but did not really 51 FIFTY YEARS OF ...
... intellectual equals . He did not meet Carlyle , Dickens , Thack- eray , Tennyson , Mill , Grote , Charles Reade , George Eliot , or any other first - class minds . He barely met the Brownings , but did not really 51 FIFTY YEARS OF ...
Side 57
... intellectual and moral exercise , I have sought to follow that poor youth through his subsequent career and observe how his soul was tortured by the blood - stain . . . . This one circumstance . has borne more fruit for me than all that ...
... intellectual and moral exercise , I have sought to follow that poor youth through his subsequent career and observe how his soul was tortured by the blood - stain . . . . This one circumstance . has borne more fruit for me than all that ...
Side 69
... intellectual distinction and an ad- diction to " the things of the mind . " The town was not at all provincial , or what the Germans call kleinstädtisch : -cosmopolitan , rather , as lying on the highway of thought . It gave one a ...
... intellectual distinction and an ad- diction to " the things of the mind . " The town was not at all provincial , or what the Germans call kleinstädtisch : -cosmopolitan , rather , as lying on the highway of thought . It gave one a ...
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admire Alcott allegory Ameri American Note Books ancient animals Arnold artist beautiful biographer bittern Blithedale Romance Boston called Carlyle character church Colonel Concord Connecticut convention cord critic Democratic Edgar Poe Edward Hoar Ellery Channing Emer Emerson English essay fellow fiction Fitchburg Railroad Germans ghost gospel Haven Hawthorne Hawthorne's humbug humor imagination intellectual interest James James Whitcomb Riley Kingsley Leaves of Grass lecture Lincoln literary literature living Longfellow Lowell Matthew Arnold ment mind Miss modern moral Mosses Musketaquit nature never novel Old Manse once Orchard House party philosopher poems poet poetry President Pyncheon ranch remember river Roosevelt Salem Sanborn's Scarlet Letter scene School sense Seven Gables Shakespeare soul spirit story symbolic tale things Thoreau thorne thought tion took town transcendentalist truth Twice-Told Twice-Told Tales Walden Walt Whitman Wayside writer wrote Yale Review young Zenobia