| Horace Elisha Scudder - 1881 - 322 str.
...think the Monarch a literary puppy, from what little I have seen of him," writes Hazard to Belknap. " He certainly does not want understanding, and yet...his expectations. His specimens already published [three numbers of the ' American Magazine '] are below mediocrity, and even in them he is too much... | |
| Horace Elisha Scudder - 1885 - 396 str.
...think the Monarch a literary puppy, from what little I have seen of him," writes Hazard to Belknap. " He certainly does not want understanding, and yet...his expectations. His specimens already published [three numbers of the ' American Magazine '] are below mediocrity, and even in them he is too much... | |
| Frederick Sturges Allen - 1909 - 28 str.
...these men towards Webster is well told by Hazard's letter to Belknap, in which he says of Webster," He certainly does not want understanding, and yet...insufficiency about him, which is (to me) intolerable." Webster in after years said of himself at this period that he was "vain and inexperienced;" but we... | |
| Emily Ellsworth Ford Skeel - 1912 - 1204 str.
...these men towards Webster is well told by Hazard's letter to Belknap, in which he says of Webster, " He certainly does not want understanding, and yet...insufficiency about him, which is (to me) intolerable." Webster in after years said of himself at this period that he was " vain and inexperienced " ; but... | |
| Emily Ellsworth Ford Skeel - 1912 - 606 str.
...these men towards Webster is well told by Hazard's letter to Belknap, in which he says of Webster, " He certainly does not want understanding, and yet...degree of insufficiency about him, which is (to me) intolerable.1' Webster in after years said of himself at this period that he was "vain and inexperienced";... | |
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