Harper's Magazine, Volume 144Harper & Brothers, 1922 - American literature |
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Page 7
... never coming . " This from Kitty Jilson ! Would you think it ? And she as familiar with all the ways of the East , straight or crooked , new or old , as I am with the path from my house to that shut - in but happy abode of yours ...
... never coming . " This from Kitty Jilson ! Would you think it ? And she as familiar with all the ways of the East , straight or crooked , new or old , as I am with the path from my house to that shut - in but happy abode of yours ...
Page 13
... never dreamed of any life save her own kind . She had watched the plays of the chil- dren . Their Christmas songs sang into her heart something of which she had never dreamed . The stories told by the teachers opened the windows to ...
... never dreamed of any life save her own kind . She had watched the plays of the chil- dren . Their Christmas songs sang into her heart something of which she had never dreamed . The stories told by the teachers opened the windows to ...
Page 32
... never quite lose ; and it is creditable to us that we never quite lose it . I can see my grandfather now reverently lifting the timeworn Bible from the table to read a chapter before going to bed . My emotions , as I ponder his piety ...
... never quite lose ; and it is creditable to us that we never quite lose it . I can see my grandfather now reverently lifting the timeworn Bible from the table to read a chapter before going to bed . My emotions , as I ponder his piety ...
Page 34
... never have been passed until the government had perfected a machinery for their enforcement . The fact that they are not enforced has had the effect of suggesting to the young that all laws are foolish and made to be broken . Boys who ...
... never have been passed until the government had perfected a machinery for their enforcement . The fact that they are not enforced has had the effect of suggesting to the young that all laws are foolish and made to be broken . Boys who ...
Page 36
... never really knew . I could never believe it , somehow . " They've brought a similar charge against every author , from Shakespeare to Masefield . And then Bissell im- pressed me as above such a thing . He was tall and a little ...
... never really knew . I could never believe it , somehow . " They've brought a similar charge against every author , from Shakespeare to Masefield . And then Bissell im- pressed me as above such a thing . He was tall and a little ...
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asked baby Barney Barr Center beautiful began Bissell Bodley Bolsheviks Bret Harte called Cholmondeley Christmas Christmas Eve color Congress Avenue course CXLIV.-No Dampierre dear Dieppe door Egbert electric energy ergy Estoril eyes face father felt Gadgetts girl Habib hand head heard heart hour ical imagination Kairwan Kate Kerrigan kimono knew laugh Lisbon lived looked marriage married matter ment mind Miss de Lisle Miss McQuaill morning mother Moulay Nekaf never night once Orlando play Portugal Portuguese Prince Feisal remember sans-culotte seemed silence smile smoke sort soul spirit stared Stoke Poges stood story street suppose talk tell things thou thought tion told took town turned voice waiting walk watched wife window woman women wonder word Younez young Zorinsky
Popular passages
Page 343 - This was an open-day vision, in which the curtains of heaven were raised and held aside from futurity to allow me to look into the things which were to come. A feeling of heavenly rapture filled my being, so much so that, like the apostle who was caught up into the third heaven, I did not know whether I was in the body or out of it during my vision. I saw things that it would be unlawful for men to utter. While the vision lasted my soul was lighted up as if illuminated with the candle of God. When...
Page 740 - Anyone who doubts the truth of what I have to say may go and look at them. I was not alone in the nomadic life that I led. There were hundreds of us drifting about in this fashion from one melancholy habitation to another. We lived as a rule two or three in a house, sometimes alone. We dined in the basement. We always had beef, done up in some way after it was dead, and there were always soda biscuits on the table. They used to have a brand of soda biscuits in those days in the Toronto boarding houses...
Page 734 - It has professors who never teach and students who never learn. It has no order, no arrangement, no system. Its curriculum is unintelligible. It has no president. It has no state legislature to tell it how to teach, and yet — it gets there. Whether we like it or not, Oxford gives something to its students, a life and a mode of thought, which in America as yet we can emulate, but not equal.
Page 270 - Start it at no particular time of your life; wander at your free will all over your life; talk only about the thing which interests you for the moment; drop it the moment its interest threatens to pale, and turn. your talk upon the new and more interesting thing that has intruded itself into your mind meantime.
Page 274 - In the small town of Hannibal, Missouri, when I was a boy, everybody was poor but didn't know it; and everybody was comfortable, and did know it.
Page 740 - VIII's kitchen, and sleeping in a tangle of ivy, the student evidently gets something not easily obtained in America. And the more I reflect on the matter the more I am convinced that it is the sleeping in the ivy that does it. How different it is from student life as I remember it! When I was a student at the University of Toronto thirty years ago, I lived — from start to finish — in seventeen different boarding houses. As far as I am aware these houses have not, or not yet, been marked with...
Page 276 - I have no recollection of ever seeing a slave auction in that town; but I am suspicious that that is because the thing was a common and commonplace spectacle, not an uncommon and impressive one. I vividly remember seeing a dozen black men and women chained to one another, once, and lying in a group on the pavement, awaiting shipment to the Southern slave market. Those were the saddest faces I have ever seen. Chained slaves could not have been a common sight, or this picture would not have made so...
Page 712 - One of the oddest sights a green-room can present," he said one day, " is when they are collecting children for a pantomime. For this purpose the prompter calls together all the women in the ballet, and begins giving out their names in order, while they press about him eager for the chance of increasing their poor pay by the extra pittance their children will receive. ' Mrs. Johnson, how many ? '
Page 737 - He has a little place that he calls his "office," with a typewriter machine and a stenographer. Here he sits and dictates letters, beginning after the best business models, "in re yours of the eighth ult, would say, etc., etc.
Page 452 - After having been hard at work from nine or ten in the morning until eleven at night scraping material together, I took the pen and spread this muck out in words and phrases and made it cover as much acreage as I could. It was fearful drudgery, soulless drudgery, and almost destitute of interest It was an awful slavery for a lazy man, and I was born lazy.