The North American Review, Volume 41Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge O. Everett, 1835 - American fiction Vols. 227-230, no. 2 include: Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
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Page 32
... equal parts : these , of course , were not of fixed length , but were longer or short- er , according to the length of the day . At the time of the equinox , when the sun rose and set at six , they would have been just equal to ours ...
... equal parts : these , of course , were not of fixed length , but were longer or short- er , according to the length of the day . At the time of the equinox , when the sun rose and set at six , they would have been just equal to ours ...
Page 379
... equal freedom , and uses with equal effect the dark and the brilliant colors , that correspond respectively with the lights and shades of life . If in Milton she regales the mental eye with the splendid vision of the opal towers and ...
... equal freedom , and uses with equal effect the dark and the brilliant colors , that correspond respectively with the lights and shades of life . If in Milton she regales the mental eye with the splendid vision of the opal towers and ...
Page 388
... equal to great effects . " We are not disposed , however , to consider him as preeminent even in this order of greatness . War was his chief sphere . He gained his ascendency in Europe by the sword . But war is not the field for the ...
... equal to great effects . " We are not disposed , however , to consider him as preeminent even in this order of greatness . War was his chief sphere . He gained his ascendency in Europe by the sword . But war is not the field for the ...
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