The American Literary Record, Volumen2Willard Thorp Lippincott, 1961 - 1007 páginas Poems, stories, essays, and selection from longer works, with biographical and critical commentary by the editors. |
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Página 259
... truth , we need severity rather than efflorescence of language . We must be simple , precise , terse . We must be cool , calm , unimpassioned . In a word , we must be in that mood which , as nearly as possible , is the exact converse of ...
... truth , we need severity rather than efflorescence of language . We must be simple , precise , terse . We must be cool , calm , unimpassioned . In a word , we must be in that mood which , as nearly as possible , is the exact converse of ...
Página 286
... truth , and his desire to communicate it without loss . The corruption of man is fol- lowed by the corruption of language . When simplicity of character and the sovereignty of ideas is broken up by the prevalence of sec- ondary desires ...
... truth , and his desire to communicate it without loss . The corruption of man is fol- lowed by the corruption of language . When simplicity of character and the sovereignty of ideas is broken up by the prevalence of sec- ondary desires ...
Página 931
... truth to be discovered ; there is only error to be exposed . In whole de- partments of human inquiry it seems to me quite unlikely that the truth ever will be dis- covered . Nevertheless , the rubber - stamp think- ing of the world ...
... truth to be discovered ; there is only error to be exposed . In whole de- partments of human inquiry it seems to me quite unlikely that the truth ever will be dis- covered . Nevertheless , the rubber - stamp think- ing of the world ...
Términos y frases comunes
Ahab appeared beauty bird boat Boston breath called clouds Cotton Mather cried Cuticle dark dead death divine door dream earth Emily Dickinson England Ethan Brand eyes face fancy father feel feet fire flowers Giovanni give Gout hand Harriet Beecher Stowe head hear heard heart heaven horse human Indian James Fenimore Cooper land leave light Lippet live look means ment mind Moby Dick morning nature never night o'er once passed person poem poet poetry poor Rip Van Winkle river round sail Samuel Sewall seemed seen sense shore side silent sing song soul speak spirit stand Starbuck stars stood strange sweet thee things thou thought tion trees truth turn village voice Walden Pond walk whole wild wind woods words young Young Goodman Brown