| Paul Martin Pearson, Philip Marshall Hicks - 1912 - 290 str.
...Tennyson than in all the text-books on government put together: "A nation still, the rulers and the ruled, Some sense of duty, something of a faith, Some reverence...will, Some civic manhood firm against the crowd." Can you find summed up the manly, self-helping spirit of Saxon liberty anywhere better than in those... | |
| New York State Bar Association - 1913 - 1302 str.
...because it is old or the new adopted because it is new. It is our work to see that the people realize " some sense of duty; something of a faith ; some reverence...will ; some civic manhood firm against the crowd." There is one imperative obligation that devolves upon the members of our profession at the present... | |
| Alfred Tennyson Baron Tennyson - 1913 - 1092 str.
...keeps her off, And keeps our liritain, whole within herself, A nation yet, the rulers and the ruled — arm-chair while the fires of Hell prey THE PRINCESS; A MEDLEY. Mix with his hearth: but you — she's — But yonder, whiff ! there comes a sudden heat, The gravest citizen seems to lose his head, The... | |
| James Brown Scott - 1918 - 776 str.
...occasion. I think that we can never be present at a ceremony of this kind, which carries our thought back to the great Revolution, by means of which our...from the clear thinking of men who wish to serve not themselves but their fellow men. "What docs the United States stand for, then, that our hearts should... | |
| United States. President (1913-1921 : Wilson), Woodrow Wilson - 1918 - 452 str.
...occasion. I think that we can never be present at a ceremony of this kind, which carries our thought back to the great Revolution, by means of which our...from the clear thinking of men who wish to serve not themselves but their fellow-men. What does the United States stand for, then, that our hearts should... | |
| Woodrow Wilson - 1918 - 488 str.
...that these men fought for. No one can turn to the career of Commodore Barry without feeling a'touch of the enthusiasm with which he devoted an originating...from the clear thinking of men who wish to serve not themselves but their fellow men. What does the United States stand for, then, that our hearts should... | |
| William George Fitz-Gerald - 1918 - 456 str.
...popular government so finely expounded as in The Princess?" "A nation yet, the rulers and the ruled — Some sense of duty, something of a faith, Some reverence...will, Some civic manhood firm against the crowd." There is much Americanism here, with aspiration towards the ideal State; a benign democracy in which... | |
| Henry Waters Taft - 1920 - 368 str.
...themselves to the law as it is and not as it ought to be. We Americans, in the words of Tennyson, have '' Some reverence for the laws ourselves have made; Some...will; Some civic manhood, firm against the crowd." The possession of the spirit speaking in these lines has no doubt saved the American people at critical... | |
| William Lee Richardson, Jesse M. Owen - 1922 - 552 str.
...very gradual modification of the existing order to form a better one. Let there be, says Tennyson, "Some reverence for the laws ourselves have made, Some patient force to change them when we will." And there have been some very fundamental changes, which, however, have been nearly always accomplished... | |
| 1925 - 492 str.
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