The Sewanee Review, Volume 7University of the South, 1899 - American fiction |
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Page 14
... written speech . To a man living in such a universe of symbols , how natural is all reli- gious symbolism ! how inevitable is that stage in religious evolution which we call " idolatry ! " Idolatry indicates an intellectual advance in ...
... written speech . To a man living in such a universe of symbols , how natural is all reli- gious symbolism ! how inevitable is that stage in religious evolution which we call " idolatry ! " Idolatry indicates an intellectual advance in ...
Page 14
... written speech . To a man living in such a universe of symbols , how natural is all reli- gious symbolism ! how inevitable is that stage in religious evolution which we call " idolatry ! " Idolatry indicates an intellectual advance in ...
... written speech . To a man living in such a universe of symbols , how natural is all reli- gious symbolism ! how inevitable is that stage in religious evolution which we call " idolatry ! " Idolatry indicates an intellectual advance in ...
Page 21
... writing in the " Revue des Deux Mondes , " " was very much better organized and regulated than the one that was held previously at Paris . " The meetings were presided over by Mme . Morgenstein , who has a genius for organiza- tion ...
... writing in the " Revue des Deux Mondes , " " was very much better organized and regulated than the one that was held previously at Paris . " The meetings were presided over by Mme . Morgenstein , who has a genius for organiza- tion ...
Page 25
... written the lives of great women . One day the Abbé de Chateauneuf found her in a great rage . She had opened one of the Epistles of St. Paul , which was lying about her boudoir , and her eye had fallen on these words : " Wives , submit ...
... written the lives of great women . One day the Abbé de Chateauneuf found her in a great rage . She had opened one of the Epistles of St. Paul , which was lying about her boudoir , and her eye had fallen on these words : " Wives , submit ...
Page 33
... written by that author himself . Hugo proves the assertion . And how gravely and deliberately he accomplishes this task of self - caricaturing ! The Comprachicos [ he avers ] traded in children . They bought and sold them . . . . And ...
... written by that author himself . Hugo proves the assertion . And how gravely and deliberately he accomplishes this task of self - caricaturing ! The Comprachicos [ he avers ] traded in children . They bought and sold them . . . . And ...
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admirable Africa American Arnold Catullus century character Chattanooga Chaucer China Church comedies Cressida critic economic England English essay fact feel fetich fiction France Frederic Harrison French genius George Meredith German give Goethe Greek hand heart Holberg Hugo Hugo's human Iago ideas influence intellectual interest Kongo Latin leisure Letters literary literature lived Macmillan Madame Marianne Marivaux matter Matthew Arnold ment Meredith mind modern Molière moral NASHVILLE nature never novel Pandarus passions Patten perhaps philosophical poems poet poetic poetry political possess present prose race reader religion religious Russia sentiment SEWANEE Shakspere Shelley Shylock Smith Premier social soul South Carolina spirit Stonewall Jackson story style sure Tartuffe TENN things thought tion to-day Troilus Troilus and Cressida true University Vere verse volume William Rowan Hamilton words writes