The Yale Review, Svazek 4George Park Fisher, George Burton Adams, Henry Walcott Farnam, Arthur Twining Hadley, John Christopher Schwab, William Fremont Blackman, Edward Gaylord Bourne, Irving Fisher, Henry Crosby Emery, Wilbur Lucius Cross Blackwell, 1915 |
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Strana 431
... Ideal Neutralization in Theory and Practice English Literature in France The Maker of Images . A Poem The Journeying Atoms The Railroad Crisis : A Way Out An Apology for Old Maids Ovid among the Goths The Unity of the Churches The True ...
... Ideal Neutralization in Theory and Practice English Literature in France The Maker of Images . A Poem The Journeying Atoms The Railroad Crisis : A Way Out An Apology for Old Maids Ovid among the Goths The Unity of the Churches The True ...
Strana 443
... ideal schemes for the preservation of the peace of the world ? If Germany wins , none of them can be carried out . What is the use of proclaiming new gospels for the reformation of barbaric Europe ? If Ger- many wins , she will not ...
... ideal schemes for the preservation of the peace of the world ? If Germany wins , none of them can be carried out . What is the use of proclaiming new gospels for the reformation of barbaric Europe ? If Ger- many wins , she will not ...
Strana 449
... ideal Europe of the future to correspond with these splashes , leaving out of account the little detached ones that interfere with the general scheme . This kind of map - making has been popular of late . Any imaginative contributor to ...
... ideal Europe of the future to correspond with these splashes , leaving out of account the little detached ones that interfere with the general scheme . This kind of map - making has been popular of late . Any imaginative contributor to ...
Strana 461
... at stake is one reason why the present gigantic struggle makes such deep appeal to the imagination and the sympathies of all of us . IMPERIALISM AND THE CHRISTIAN IDEAL By BENJAMIN W. BACON Whereas THE NEW EUROPE 461.
... at stake is one reason why the present gigantic struggle makes such deep appeal to the imagination and the sympathies of all of us . IMPERIALISM AND THE CHRISTIAN IDEAL By BENJAMIN W. BACON Whereas THE NEW EUROPE 461.
Strana 462
... IDEAL By BENJAMIN W. BACON Whereas that Providence which directs all the events of our life , re - awakening zeal and ambition , has conferred upon life its most perfect adjustment by granting us Augustus , whom She filled with virtue ...
... IDEAL By BENJAMIN W. BACON Whereas that Providence which directs all the events of our life , re - awakening zeal and ambition , has conferred upon life its most perfect adjustment by granting us Augustus , whom She filled with virtue ...
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Strana 588 - In short, every summer one lives in a state of mutiny and murmur, and I have found the reason : it is because we will affect to have a summer, and we have no title to any such thing. Our poets learnt . their trade of the Romans, and so adopted the terms of their masters. They talk of shady groves, purling streams, and cooling breezes, and we get sore throats and agues with attempting to realize these visions.
Strana 588 - The best sun we have is made of Newcastle coal, and I am determined never to reckon upon any other. We ruin ourselves with inviting over foreign trees, and make our houses clamber up hills to look at prospects. How our ancestors would laugh at us, who knew there was no being comfortable, unless you had a high hill before your nose, and a thick warm wood at your back! Taste is too freezing a commodity for us, and, depend upon it, will go out of fashion again.
Strana 462 - Fear not, for behold I bring you good tidings of great joy which shall be to all people. For unto you is born this day in the city of David a Saviour, which is Christ the Lord. And this shall be a sign unto you; ye shall find the Babe wrapped in swaddling clothes lying in a manger.
Strana 471 - But ye shall not be so: but he that is greatest among you, let him be as the younger; and he that is chief, as he that doth serve.
Strana 514 - How many million- or billion-fold our sense of sight and touch would have to be increased to bring this about! We live in a world of collisions, disruptions, and hurtling missiles of which our senses give us not the slightest evidence, and it is well that they do not. There is a tremendous activity in the air we breathe, in the water we drink, in the food we eat, and in the soil we walk upon, which, if magnified till our senses could take it in, would probably drive us mad. It is in this interior...
Strana 751 - Oh, I am a cook and a captain bold, And the mate of the Nancy brig, And a bo'sun tight, and a midshipmite, And the crew of the captain's gig.
Strana 467 - Lord is now present ; let no man beguile you in any wise : for it will not be, except the falling away come first, and the man of sin be revealed, the son of perdition, he that opposeth and exalteth himself against all that is called God or that is worshipped ; so that he sitteth in the temple of God, setting himself forth as God.
Strana 820 - It is of course not necessary to remind the German Government that the sole right of a belligerent in dealing with neutral vessels on the high seas is limited to visit and search, unless a blockade is proclaimed and effectively maintained, which this Government does not understand to be proposed in this case.
Strana 479 - Peace concluded between those parties; and on the expiration of that time the independence and neutrality of Belgium will, so far as the High Contracting Parties are respectively concerned, continue to rest as heretofore on the 1st Article of the Quintuple Treaty of the 19th of April 1839.
Strana 478 - Such a guarantee has obviously rather the character of a moral sanction to the arrangements which it defends than that of a contingent liability to make war. It would, no doubt, give a right to make war, but it would not necessarily impose the obligation.