Tufts College Graduate, Τόμοι 9-10

Εξώφυλλο
Tufts College, 1911

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Σελίδα 15 - The ship may sink And I may drink A hasty death in the bitter sea; But all that I leave In the ocean grave Can be slipped and spared, and no loss to me. What care I Though falls the sky, And the shrivelling earth to a cinder turn ? No fires of doom Can ever consume What never was made nor meant to burn. Let go the breath! There is no death To the living soul, nor loss, nor harm. Not of the clod Is the life of God; Let it mount, as it will, from form to form.
Σελίδα 15 - Love is and was my Lord and King, And in his presence I attend To hear the tidings of my friend, Which every hour his couriers bring. Love is and was my King and Lord, And will be, tho...
Σελίδα 78 - Contrary to the popular notion, the creation of so-called "atmospheric" impression in literature is much easier, and of a lower order of intellect, than to convey in familiar words exactly what was done, and why. This also takes imagination. But, as I have said, it was not my intention, in writing this, to record all that I learned of the trade so far as I advanced, but rather to make public a tragicomedy that was enacted in spider life. To...
Σελίδα 139 - There's a great text in Galatians, Once you trip on it, entails Twenty-nine distinct damnations, One sure, if another fails; If I trip him just a-dying, Sure of heaven as sure can be, Spin him round and send him flying Off to hell, a Manichee?
Σελίδα 15 - And hear at times a sentinel Who moves about from place to place, And whispers to the worlds of space, In the deep night, that all is well. And all is well, tho...
Σελίδα 73 - Enslaved, illogical, elate, He greets th' embarrassed Gods, nor fears To shake the iron hand of Fate Or match with Destiny for beers.
Σελίδα 110 - The world looks like a multiplication-table, or a mathematical equation, which, turn it how you will, balances itself. Take what figure you will, its exact value, nor more nor less, still returns to you. Every secret is told, every crime is punished, every virtue rewarded, every wrong redressed, in silence and certainty.
Σελίδα 73 - He greets th' embarrassed Gods, nor fears To shake the iron hand of Fate Or match with Destiny for beers. Lo! imperturbable he rules, Unkempt, disreputable, vast — And, in the teeth of all the schools I — I shall save him at the last!
Σελίδα 75 - They fade in the light of Their meaning sublime. 'The fiend that man harries Is love of the Best; Yawns the pit of the Dragon, Lit by rays from the Blest. The Lethe of Nature Can't trance him again, Whose soul sees the perfect, Which his eyes seek in vain.
Σελίδα 119 - The teacher must be a man of culture, be in contact, as Matthew Arnold said, with the best that has been thought and said in the world. He must, thus, have breadth; an ample, generous assortment of knowledge must be his mental food ; his contacts must be so many and so sure that he will not lose his perspective in his enthusiasm for his special work. But this enthusiasm must rest upon concentrated power, upon mastery in a limited field.

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