| George Herbert Palmer - 1897 - 40 páginas
...Patrick Henry, the orator who more than any other could craze our Revolutionary fathers, it was said that he was accustomed to throw himself headlong into...going on will mar all. We must give our thought its head, and not drive it with too tight a rein, nor grow timid when it begins to prance a bit. Of course... | |
| George Herbert Palmer - 1897 - 80 páginas
...more than any other could craze our Eevolutionary fathers, it was said that he was accustomed to t«ow himself headlong into the middle of a sentence, trusting...going on will mar all. We must give our thought its head, and not drive it with too tight a rein, nor grow timid when it begins to prance a bit. Of course... | |
| Chester Noyes Greenough - 1906 - 330 páginas
...more than any other could craze our Revolutionary fathers, it was said that he was accustomed to 10 throw himself headlong into the middle of a sentence,...hear that end. At the beginning, it is the beginning 15 which claims the attention of both speaker and listener, and trepidation about going on will mar... | |
| George Herbert Palmer - 1909 - 68 páginas
...simplicity. Accuracy alone is not a thing to be sought, but accuracy and dash. It was said of Fox, the English orator and statesman, that he was accustomed...going on will mar all. We must give our thought its head, and not drive it with too tight a rein, or grow timid when it begins to prance a bit. Of course... | |
| George Herbert Palmer - 1909 - 70 páginas
...he was accustomed to throw himself headlong into the middle of a sentence, trusting to God Almjghty to get him out. So must we speak. We must not, before...going on will mar all. We must give our thought its head, and not drive it with too tight a rein, or grow timid when it begins to prance a bit. Of course... | |
| Frank William Scott, Jacob Zeitlin - 1914 - 690 páginas
...Patrick Henry, the orator who more than any other could craze our Revolutionary fathers, it was said that he was accustomed to throw himself headlong into...going on will mar all. We must give our thought its head, and not drive it with too tight a rein, nor grow timid when it begins to prance a bit. Of course... | |
| 368 páginas
...orator and statesman, that he was accustomed to throw himself headlong into the middle of a semence, trusting to God Almighty to get him out. - So must...be; for if we do, nobody will care to hear that end. \t the beginning, it is the beginning which claims the attention of both speaker and listener and trepidation... | |
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