We are scarce our fathers' shadows cast at noon. Our past is well-nigh desolate of aesthetic stimulus. We have none or next to none of these aids to the imagination, of these coigns of vantage for the tendrils of memory or affection. Not one of our older... Official Guide to Harvard University - Página 10editado por - 1899 - 138 páginasVisualização integral - Acerca deste livro
| James Russell Lowell - 1886 - 284 páginas
...well-nigh desolate of aesthetic stimulus. We have none or next to none of these aids to the imagination, of these coigns of vantage for the tendrils of memory...ever become so. Time refuses to console them. They all look as if they meant business, and nothing more. And it is precisely because this College meant... | |
| Emma Elizabeth Brown - 1887 - 346 páginas
...well-nigh desolate of aesthetic stimulus. We have none, or next to none, of these aids to the imagination, of these coigns of vantage for the tendrils of memory...ever become so. Time refuses to console them. They all look as though they meant business, and nothing more. And it is precisely because this college... | |
| Harvard University, Justin Winsor - 1887 - 410 páginas
...well-nigh desolate of aesthetic stimulus. We have none, or next to none, of these aids to the imagination, of these coigns of vantage for the tendrils of memory...ever become so. Time refuses to console them. They all look as if they meant business, and nothing more. And it is precisely because this college meant... | |
| James Russell Lowell - 1890 - 334 páginas
...well-nigh desolate of aesthetic stimulus. We have none or next to none of these aids to the imagination, of these coigns of vantage for the tendrils of memory...ever become so. Time refuses to console them. They all look as if they meant business, and nothing more. And it is precisely because this College meant... | |
| James Russell Lowell - 1890 - 330 páginas
...well-nigh desolate of aesthetic stimulus. We have none or next to none of these aids to the imagination, of these coigns of vantage for the tendrils of memory...ever become so. Time refuses to console them. They all look as if they meant busiuess, and nothing more. And it is precisely because this College meant... | |
| Emma Elizabeth Brown - 1895 - 372 páginas
...well-nigh desolate of aesthetic stimulus. We have none, or next to none, of these aids to the imagination, of these coigns of vantage for the tendrils of memory...ever become so. Time refuses to console them. They all look as though they meant business, and nothing more. And it is precisely because this college... | |
| Mayo Williamson Hazeltine - 1902 - 490 páginas
...well-nigh desolate of aesthetic stimulus. We have none, or next to none, of these aids to the imagination, of these coigns of vantage for the tendrils of memory...ever become so. Time refuses to console them. They all look as though they meant business and nothing more. And it is precisely because this college meant... | |
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