Speaking of Books and LifeHolt, Rinehart and Winston, 1966 - 279 Seiten Contains 125 of the 900 columns the author produced for the New York Times. |
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Seite 47
... effect of slow , gradual , day- to - day development - the long , leisurely unfolding of a character and a life . " These are , it seems to me , not unreasonable requirements , and Theodore Roosevelt met most of them . Certainly he ...
... effect of slow , gradual , day- to - day development - the long , leisurely unfolding of a character and a life . " These are , it seems to me , not unreasonable requirements , and Theodore Roosevelt met most of them . Certainly he ...
Seite 54
... effect , he may act or speak in a manner which the character himself dictates . Can his " creator , " then , comprehend and reveal him any more fully than he can comprehend and reveal himself or another actual person ? These are teasing ...
... effect , he may act or speak in a manner which the character himself dictates . Can his " creator , " then , comprehend and reveal him any more fully than he can comprehend and reveal himself or another actual person ? These are teasing ...
Seite 92
... effects . What is unfortunate , I think , is the choice of the word " noise , " presumably selected , partly at least ... effect which the word " creak " itself would have preserved . Mr. Fiedler asks why I find it easy to understand ...
... effects . What is unfortunate , I think , is the choice of the word " noise , " presumably selected , partly at least ... effect which the word " creak " itself would have preserved . Mr. Fiedler asks why I find it easy to understand ...
Inhalt
Foreword 37 | 3 |
Truth Isnt Always Stranger | 7 |
The Proper Study of Mankind | 41 |
Urheberrecht | |
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