The South Atlantic Quarterly, Volume 21John Spencer Bassett, Edwin Mims, William Henry Glasson, William Preston Few, William Kenneth Boyd, William Hane Wannamaker Duke University Press, 1922 |
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... English and Scottish Ballads . A Southern College Boy Eighty Years Ago . Gaston Paris . The South and the Embargo . Book Reviews .. R. Estcourt Thornton S. Graves .Robert T. Kerlin .F . Livingston Joy Virginia Fitsgerald A. J. Morrison ...
... English and Scottish Ballads . A Southern College Boy Eighty Years Ago . Gaston Paris . The South and the Embargo . Book Reviews .. R. Estcourt Thornton S. Graves .Robert T. Kerlin .F . Livingston Joy Virginia Fitsgerald A. J. Morrison ...
Page 14
... English poetry ) , will find himself in the main current of a fine spirit of nationality . From the Whig and Tory flytings of Revolutionary days , through the tyrant - quelling era of Poe's contemporaries , the exaltation of The Battle ...
... English poetry ) , will find himself in the main current of a fine spirit of nationality . From the Whig and Tory flytings of Revolutionary days , through the tyrant - quelling era of Poe's contemporaries , the exaltation of The Battle ...
Page 33
... English apathy . The book has an amazing exuberance of feeling and expression . Nowhere is it more evident that Car- lyle thinks and writes with his whole body . Through four long parts he belabors , unwearying , the numbskulls of his ...
... English apathy . The book has an amazing exuberance of feeling and expression . Nowhere is it more evident that Car- lyle thinks and writes with his whole body . Through four long parts he belabors , unwearying , the numbskulls of his ...
Page 34
... English business men . The practical value of his book would not be enhanced by Latin syntax , however erudite . But if heaviness was the English reader's bete noir , it was also Carlyle's . He avoids the shoal of pedantry by never ...
... English business men . The practical value of his book would not be enhanced by Latin syntax , however erudite . But if heaviness was the English reader's bete noir , it was also Carlyle's . He avoids the shoal of pedantry by never ...
Page 40
... English newspaper , in adjacent columns , accounts of the imprisonment of trivial offenders , and also of the release of notorious strike leaders . The union of all labor parties of the world , without respect to nationalism , is possi ...
... English newspaper , in adjacent columns , accounts of the imprisonment of trivial offenders , and also of the release of notorious strike leaders . The union of all labor parties of the world , without respect to nationalism , is possi ...
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Popular passages
Page 53 - “Come, my friends,” he calls: “Tis not too late to seek a newer world. Push off, and sitting well in order smite The sounding furrows; for my purpose holds To sail beyond the sunset and the baths Of all the western stars, until I die.”
Page 372 - with Ariel's telling Prospero a few minutes after the storm that the rest of the king's fleet “all have met again And are upon the Mediterranean flote, Bound sadly home for Naples, Supposing that they saw the king's ship wreck'd And his great person perish.”
Page 151 - “It is wonderful that five thousand years have now elapsed since the creation of the world, and still it is undecided whether or not there has ever been an instance of the spirit of any person appearing after death. All argument is against it; but all belief is for it.”” He
Page 355 - nor the virtue and salt of the soil spent by manuring; the graves have not been opened for gold, the mines not broken with sledges, nor their images pulled down out of their temples. It hath never been entered by any army of strength, and never conquered or possessed by any Christian prince.” It is
Page 277 - OF A LADY OF QUALITY. Being the Narrative of a Journey from Scotland to the West Indies, North Carolina, and Portugal, in the Years 1774 to 1776. Edited by Evangeline Walker Andrews, in Collaboration with Charles McLean Andrews. New Haven:
Page 355 - “Whether it be true or not the matter is not great, neither can there be any profit in the imagination; for mine own part I saw them not, but I am resolved that so many people did not all combine or forethink to make the
Page 150 - confusedly seen, and little understood; and for it, the indistinct cry of national persuasion, which may be perhaps resolved at last into prejudice and tradition. I never could advance my curiosity to conviction; but came away at last only willing to believe.” These
Page 354 - the Ewaipanoma. “They are reported to have their eyes in their shoulders, and their mouths in the middle of their breasts, and * * * a long train of hair groweth backward between their shoulders.”
Page 354 - which fell with that fury that the rebound of waters made it seem as if it had been all covered over with a great shower of rain; and in some places we took it at the first for a smoke that had risen over some great town
Page 151 - “It is the most extraordinary thing that has happened in my day. I heard it with my own ears, from his uncle, Lord Westcote. I am so glad to have every evidence of the spiritual world, that I am willing to believe it,'