Routine and Ideals: By Le Baron Russell BriggsHoughton, Mifflin, 1906 - 232 páginas |
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Resultados 6-10 de 17
Página 66
... worth believing , and spends a great deal of strength in making simple things hard ; but Emer- son was a philosopher in the best sense of the word , a lover of wisdom and of truth . He was also a poet ; not a poet like Homer who sang ...
... worth believing , and spends a great deal of strength in making simple things hard ; but Emer- son was a philosopher in the best sense of the word , a lover of wisdom and of truth . He was also a poet ; not a poet like Homer who sang ...
Página 80
... worth while to live ; for in his pre- sence , even in the presence of what he had written , it was harder to be a coward than to be brave . - Of young people — not children , but young men and women- he was the supreme helper ; and we ...
... worth while to live ; for in his pre- sence , even in the presence of what he had written , it was harder to be a coward than to be brave . - Of young people — not children , but young men and women- he was the supreme helper ; and we ...
Página 86
... worth the cruise , is near , And every wave is charmed . ' " - If disaster come , there is good in it . " We learn geology the morning after the earthquake . " George Eliot tells us of a woman who seemed among other people like a fine ...
... worth the cruise , is near , And every wave is charmed . ' " - If disaster come , there is good in it . " We learn geology the morning after the earthquake . " George Eliot tells us of a woman who seemed among other people like a fine ...
Página 96
... worth living besides what is com- monly called practical . Lowell reminds us that the question " What is it good for ? " " would abolish the rose and be answered triumphantly by the cabbage . " " The danger of the prosaic type of mind ...
... worth living besides what is com- monly called practical . Lowell reminds us that the question " What is it good for ? " " would abolish the rose and be answered triumphantly by the cabbage . " " The danger of the prosaic type of mind ...
Página 115
... worth something is happy in his work and wants to do all the work he can ; he who takes it as a necessary evil is never happy in or out of it and is of small use in the world : " He is a swinward , but I think No swinward of the best ...
... worth something is happy in his work and wants to do all the work he can ; he who takes it as a necessary evil is never happy in or out of it and is of small use in the world : " He is a swinward , but I think No swinward of the best ...
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Termos e frases comuns
AGNES REPPLIER Arlo Bates athletics autumnal face believe better Boston boys called cheerfulness child college officer courage Crown 8vo danger dents discipline drudgery Emerson excuses eyes father feel fellow football Freshman gilt top girls grizzly bears hard Harvard College heart honor human ideals instructors intellectual interesting kind knew labor lecture lege less letics lives loafing Lyman Abbott marriage Massachusetts Hall master means mind mother ness never once pathy persons play poet poetry Postpaid prefect President Procrustes Professor Professor X pupils responsibility routine says school and college school discipline small college social soul strength strong student sympathy teacher tell temptation thee things thou thought tion to-day truth University vard vision walked WELLESLEY COLLEGE William the Conqueror woman women young youth