The Sewanee Review, Volume 7University of the South, 1899 - American fiction |
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Page 9
... causes , and cease to regard them with apprehension . It is the element of mystery behind the phenomenon , the apparently self - moving activity , akin to that inner sense of freedom or volition which he experiences in his own con ...
... causes , and cease to regard them with apprehension . It is the element of mystery behind the phenomenon , the apparently self - moving activity , akin to that inner sense of freedom or volition which he experiences in his own con ...
Page 12
... cause of the phenomena which he beheld . He sought , as d'Alviella declares , " to appro- priate a natural object in order to secure the services of the spirit or power which was lodged within it . " What more , in truth , do the ...
... cause of the phenomena which he beheld . He sought , as d'Alviella declares , " to appro- priate a natural object in order to secure the services of the spirit or power which was lodged within it . " What more , in truth , do the ...
Page 12
... cause of the phenomena which he beheld . He sought , as d'Alviella declares , “ to appro- priate a natural object in order to secure the services of the spirit or power which was lodged within it . " What more , in truth , do the ...
... cause of the phenomena which he beheld . He sought , as d'Alviella declares , “ to appro- priate a natural object in order to secure the services of the spirit or power which was lodged within it . " What more , in truth , do the ...
Page 12
... cause of the phenomena which he beheld . He sought , as d'Alviella declares , " to appro- priate a natural object in order to secure the services of the spirit or power which was lodged within it . " What more , in truth , do the ...
... cause of the phenomena which he beheld . He sought , as d'Alviella declares , " to appro- priate a natural object in order to secure the services of the spirit or power which was lodged within it . " What more , in truth , do the ...
Page 23
... cause , certainly he does not discuss affairs of public importance with her , but only matters of the house- hold , and even here she does not venture to ventilate her views too freely , though it may all have come through her dowry ...
... cause , certainly he does not discuss affairs of public importance with her , but only matters of the house- hold , and even here she does not venture to ventilate her views too freely , though it may all have come through her dowry ...
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