Self Culture, Volume 7, Issue 1Werner Company, 1898 |
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... Human Progress : Advance of Medicine in the Last Sixty Years ( Concluded ) Editorial and Journal Review : The Nation and the Crisis The Dreyfus Case - Zola's Conviction The Trial for the Shooting of the Hazleton Miners SELF CULTURE'S ...
... Human Progress : Advance of Medicine in the Last Sixty Years ( Concluded ) Editorial and Journal Review : The Nation and the Crisis The Dreyfus Case - Zola's Conviction The Trial for the Shooting of the Hazleton Miners SELF CULTURE'S ...
Page 17
... human animosities , and mingle in mortal combats . It was such dramatic concep- tion which enabled Virgil to paint with a touch the scenes he had never seen , as when he depicts the splintered peaks of the Caucasus in a single forcible ...
... human animosities , and mingle in mortal combats . It was such dramatic concep- tion which enabled Virgil to paint with a touch the scenes he had never seen , as when he depicts the splintered peaks of the Caucasus in a single forcible ...
Page 25
... human life in the dim long - ago . Let it be remembered too that man at this period had no weapons except clubs and sharp stones . When , alone , he met his savage foe , it was either to fall a hopeless victim , or to fight fiercely at ...
... human life in the dim long - ago . Let it be remembered too that man at this period had no weapons except clubs and sharp stones . When , alone , he met his savage foe , it was either to fall a hopeless victim , or to fight fiercely at ...
Page 26
... human effort . Our heroes and heroines , no more than those of long ago , enjoy lives of uninterrupted happiness and ease . Who would wish to read of such a hero ? Who would sympathize with a heroine that was not beset by trouble of ...
... human effort . Our heroes and heroines , no more than those of long ago , enjoy lives of uninterrupted happiness and ease . Who would wish to read of such a hero ? Who would sympathize with a heroine that was not beset by trouble of ...
Page 29
... human heart to its profoundest depths , and was able to discover possibilities of evil in the best , and the ever ... humanity , and we may claim him only in so far as he marks one step in our intellectual progress as a nation . There ...
... human heart to its profoundest depths , and was able to discover possibilities of evil in the best , and the ever ... humanity , and we may claim him only in so far as he marks one step in our intellectual progress as a nation . There ...
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Æneas aged American animal April Austria Banffy Bohemia Browning called Carthage Catalogue cause cent century character Chicago Count Badeni Count Taaffe court crusades Cuba Czechs death Dido digested disease earth Émile Zola Encyclopædia Britannica England English epigram epigrammatists favor France French German give Greek hand Havana heart hero human Hungary interest kind king Lady land less literature lives Lord Salisbury magazine manner ment mention SELF CULTURE modern municipal MURAT HALSTEAD nation nature novels organs party patriotism planet poet political practical question railroad reader Robert Browning Russia Saladin scenes Scott seems Silas Marner Spanish stomach story Tennyson things thought tion ture Virginia Comedians volumes woman women write to advertisers wrote York young Zola دان دان دان
Popular passages
Page 7 - SOME ask'd me where the rubies grew, And nothing I did say : But with my finger pointed to The lips of Julia. Some ask'd how pearls did grow, and where ; Then spoke I to my girl, To part her lips, and show'd them there The quarelets of Pearl.
Page 73 - Every reader has his first book ; I mean to say, one book among all others which in early youth first fascinates his imagination, and at once excites and satisfies the desires of his mind.
Page 45 - I have gone the whole round of creation: I saw and I spoke. I, a work of God's hand for that purpose, received in my brain, And pronounced on, the rest of his handwork, — returned him again His creation's approval or censure; I spoke as I saw. I report, as a man may of God's work: all's love, yet all's law.
Page 9 - Three poets, in three distant ages born, Greece, Italy, and England did adorn. The first, in loftiness of thought surpass'd ; The next, in majesty ; in both, the last. The force of nature could no further go ; To make a third, she join'd the former two.
Page 10 - Perhaps it was right to dissemble your love, But why did you kick me down stairs...
Page 24 - We live in deeds, not years; in thoughts, not breaths; In feelings, not in figures on a dial. We should count time by heart-throbs. He most lives Who thinks most — feels the noblest — acts the best.
Page 78 - With burnished neck of verdant gold, erect Amidst his circling spires, that on the grass Floated redundant...
Page 11 - Here lies Fred, Who was alive, and is dead. Had it been his father, I had much rather. Had it been his brother, Still better than another. Had it been his sister, No one would have missed her. Had it been the whole generation, Still better for the nation. But since 'tis only Fred, Who was alive, and is dead, There's no more to be said.
Page 22 - As this old gentleman, who had been in all the German wars, found very few to listen to his tales of military feats, he formed a sort of alliance with me, and I used invariably to attend him for the pleasure of hearing those communications.