Annual Meeting: Proceedings, Constitution, List of Active Members, and Addresses

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Página 25 - Under lifted eyebrows, his eyes regarded me, questioningly, helplessly, unhappily. I nodded and said nothing; it seemed the best way of encouraging him to proceed. 'The fact is,' he went on, turning away from me and looking at the ground, 'the fact is. . . .' But it was a long time before he could make up his mind to tell me what the fact was. Knowing so very well what the fact was, I could have laughed aloud, if pity had not been stronger in me than mockery, when he wound up with the pathetically...
Página 184 - I have pained you, if they appear to you to care for riches or anything else before virtue; and if they think themselves to be something when they are nothing, reproach them as I have done you, for not attending to what they ought, and for conceiving themselves to be something when they are worth nothing.
Página 176 - I felt that he had spoken well. But no mortal speech has ever excited in my mind such emotions as are kindled by this magician. Whenever I hear him, I am, as it were, charmed and fettered. My heart leaps like an inspired Corybant. My inmost soul is stung by his words as by the bite of a serpent; it is indignant at ka own rude and ignoble character.
Página 190 - And should you even now offer to acquit me, on condition of my renouncing this duty, I should tell you with all respect and affection that I will obey the god rather than you and that I will persist until my dying day in cross-questioning you, exposing your want of wisdom and virtue and reproaching you until the defect be remedied.
Página 219 - A friendless warfare ! lingering long Through weary day and weary year, A wild and many-weaponed throng .Hang on thy front, and flank, and rear. Yet nerve thy spirit to the proof, And blench not at thy chosen lot. The timid good may stand aloof, The sage may frown — yet faint thou not. Nor heed the shaft too surely cast, The...
Página 174 - It is as true of the negro as of any other human being, that the life is more than meat and the body than raiment, and that a man's life consisteth not in the abundance of the things he possesseth.
Página 105 - ... the etymology or primary meaning of the words they use. There are cases in which more knowledge, of more value, may be conveyed by the history of a word than by the history of a campaign."— Coleridge's Aids to Reflection, Aphor.
Página 134 - And if I, now standing with your lordships on the brink of the most momentous decision that ever human assembly came to, at any period of the world, and seeking to arrest you...
Página 74 - Portland, from the Committee on the Nomination of Officers for the ensuing year, reported the...
Página 75 - Boston, Mass. Censors — James A. Page, Boston, Mass.; C. Goodwin Clark, Boston, Mass.; Edward Stickney, Newton, Mass. Counsellors — Charles Hutchins, Boston, Mass. ; George N. Bigelow, Framingham, Mass.

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