The Yale Literary Magazine, Bind 60,Oplag 1–3Yale Literary Society, 1894 |
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Side 15
... fact at that time , to be allowed to witness these perform- ances was one of the greatest honors the court could bestow , and these gatherings afford us the purest picture of that impure age . With such patrons and the Oct. , 1894 ] 15 ...
... fact at that time , to be allowed to witness these perform- ances was one of the greatest honors the court could bestow , and these gatherings afford us the purest picture of that impure age . With such patrons and the Oct. , 1894 ] 15 ...
Side 24
... fact , Miss Jenks arrived at the Thorndike residence at just the hour she was expected , which may account in some degree for the hearty welcome she received from her usually undemonstrative niece . It is hardly justifiable to attribute ...
... fact , Miss Jenks arrived at the Thorndike residence at just the hour she was expected , which may account in some degree for the hearty welcome she received from her usually undemonstrative niece . It is hardly justifiable to attribute ...
Side 25
... fact that his attention was drawn to what appeared to be dew - drops glistening on the petals of the orange blossoms which composed the centre - piece . He was still the more sur- prised that the upturned bowls of the spoons laid ...
... fact that his attention was drawn to what appeared to be dew - drops glistening on the petals of the orange blossoms which composed the centre - piece . He was still the more sur- prised that the upturned bowls of the spoons laid ...
Side 38
... fact his desire to become a musician had not been life long , nor had his especial prefer- ence for the violin manifested itself until the previous winter . Nevertheless his progress had been something unusual , so that after but six ...
... fact his desire to become a musician had not been life long , nor had his especial prefer- ence for the violin manifested itself until the previous winter . Nevertheless his progress had been something unusual , so that after but six ...
Side 46
... facts without monotony and at times the narrative strikes into a rapidity and fullness of force that is dramatic in the extreme . The book is well bound , printed in excellent type upon paper of a quality that it would be a blessing to ...
... facts without monotony and at times the narrative strikes into a rapidity and fullness of force that is dramatic in the extreme . The book is well bound , printed in excellent type upon paper of a quality that it would be a blessing to ...
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