Harper's Magazine, Volume 142Henry Mills Alden, Thomas Bucklin Wells, Lee Foster Hartman, Frederick Lewis Allen Harper & Brothers, 1920 - American literature |
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Page 4
... mean by the " hypnosis " of history . One might answer in a sentence that the educated American is infinitely more conscious of his national origins than is the denizen of any other part of the world . The past of his country acts as ...
... mean by the " hypnosis " of history . One might answer in a sentence that the educated American is infinitely more conscious of his national origins than is the denizen of any other part of the world . The past of his country acts as ...
Page 10
... mean now ? I don't think it means anything at all . The immigrants have swept it all away . I know that the romantic will reply that the immigrants came because sturdy New England had es- tablished democratic freedom in this corner of ...
... mean now ? I don't think it means anything at all . The immigrants have swept it all away . I know that the romantic will reply that the immigrants came because sturdy New England had es- tablished democratic freedom in this corner of ...
Page 14
... means that there are at least 5,000 O'Briens not in the telephone ; that with the families , 20,000 Bostonians are ... mean all the country that lies northeast of New York ( in despite of the people who would confine New England to a ...
... means that there are at least 5,000 O'Briens not in the telephone ; that with the families , 20,000 Bostonians are ... mean all the country that lies northeast of New York ( in despite of the people who would confine New England to a ...
Page 15
... in its employees the human qualities of cour- tesy and kindness . I do not suppose these remarks will mean much to my American readers , for they are accus- tomed to that point of view , but to an HAIL , COLUMBIA ! 15.
... in its employees the human qualities of cour- tesy and kindness . I do not suppose these remarks will mean much to my American readers , for they are accus- tomed to that point of view , but to an HAIL , COLUMBIA ! 15.
Page 21
... mean— ' 39 Again Terry's attention wandered . He saw that she would have a great deal to say on the subject of brotherly love and it was not one which strongly inter- ested him . Mrs. Conrad Peet was speaking reproachfully to Sylvia ...
... mean— ' 39 Again Terry's attention wandered . He saw that she would have a great deal to say on the subject of brotherly love and it was not one which strongly inter- ested him . Mrs. Conrad Peet was speaking reproachfully to Sylvia ...
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