| Charles Reynolds Brown - 1899 - 200 páginas
...world for us. How small indeed seem individual distinctions when we look back on these overwhelming numbers of human beings panting and straining under the pressure of that vital want. And how unessential in the eyes of God must be the small surplus of the individual's merit, swamped as it is... | |
| Charles Reynolds Brown - 1906 - 264 páginas
...world for us. How small indeed seem individual distinctions when we look back on these overwhelming numbers of human beings panting and straining under the pressure of that vital want! And how unessential in the eyes of God must QDfje JWain be the small surplus of the individual's merit, swamped... | |
| Charles Reynolds Brown - 1911 - 268 páginas
...numbers of human beings panting and straining under the pressure of that vital want! And how unessential in the eyes of God must be the small surplus of the...in the vast ocean of the common merit of mankind, humbly and undauntedly doing the fundamental duty and living the heroic life! We grow humble and reverent... | |
| American Museum of Natural History - 1916 - 610 páginas
...world for us. How small, indeed, seem individual distinctions when we look back on these overwhelming numbers of human beings panting and straining under...reverent as we contemplate the prodigious spectacle." As to what manner of men these were, we are no longer entirely in the dark and Professor Osborn's book... | |
| William James - 1917 - 88 páginas
...world for us. How small indeed seem individual distinctions when we look back on these overwhelming numbers of human beings panting and straining under...doing the fundamental duty and living the heroic life 1 We grow humble and reverent as we contemplate the prodigious spectacle. Not our differences and distinctions... | |
| Martin Johnson - 1929 - 382 páginas
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| Carl Sandburg - 1983 - 208 páginas
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| North Callahan - 2010 - 277 páginas
...upward it had been from the early men to the latest." He was haunted by the words of William James: "How inessential in the eyes of God must be the small...the fundamental duty, and living the heroic life." At Lombard Carl found time to read Kipling and some of Mark Twain. His membership in the "Poor Writer's... | |
| 1938 - 122 páginas
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