The Essay in American Literature, Ausgabe 3Faculty of the Graduate School New York University, 1914 - 127 Seiten |
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Addison American Essay AMERICAN ESSAYISTS American literature American Magazine appeared Aulus Gellius Bacon Benjamin Franklin Boston Boston Chronicle Century chapter character CHARLES Chicago Chronicle Cincinnati colonial contributed critical essays culture delightful Dickinson discourse Donald Grant Mitchell Edited Emerson England essayists expression Federalist field Francis Francis Hopkinson Friends Gazette Happiness HENRY humor ideal influence interesting Irving Irving's JAMES John John Dickinson John Trumbull Joseph Dennie Journal leisure Letters literary live LL.D meditations ment Merrimack Rivers Miscellaneous Essays Miscellanies modern Montaigne Montaigne's Moral nature newspapers numbers Papers Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Gazette period Personal Essay Personal Essayists Philadelphia Philosophical pleasure poet political essays prose published Rambles readers REVD Review Samuel San Francisco satire says sentences series of essays Spectator spirit style Tatler things Thomas Thomas Paine Thoreau thought treatise Trumbull Walden WILLIAM word Essay wrote York and Chicago York and London
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 78 - If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music which he hears, however measured or far away.
Seite 40 - These are the times that try men's souls. The summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from the service of their country; but he that stands it now, deserves the love and thanks of man and woman.
Seite 28 - Then I compared my Spectator with the original, discovered some of my faults, and corrected them. But I found I wanted a stock of words, or a readiness in recollecting and using them...
Seite 28 - I took some of the tales and turned them into verse; and, after a time, when I had pretty well forgotten the prose, turned them back again.
Seite 29 - I was excited to try my hand among them ; but being still a boy, and suspecting that my brother would object to printing anything of mine in his paper if he knew it to be mine...
Seite 36 - the opinion of learned philosophers of our race who lived and flourished long before my time that this vast world, the Moulin Joly, could not itself subsist more than eighteen hours; and I think there was some foundation for that opinion, since by the apparent motion of the great luminary that gives life to all nature, and which in my time has evidently declined considerably...
Seite 36 - We had been shown numberless skeletons of a kind of little fly, called an ephemera, whose successive generations, we were told, were bred and expired within the day. I happened to see a living company of them on a leaf, who appeared to be engaged in conversation. You know I understand all the inferior animal tongues...
Seite 72 - I long ago lost a hound, a bay horse and a turtle-dove, and am still on their trail. Many are the travellers I have spoken concerning them, describing their tracks, and what calls they answered to. I have met one or two who had heard the hound, and the tramp of the horse, and even seen the dove disappear behind a cloud; and they seemed as anxious to recover them as if they had lost them themselves.
Seite 28 - ... the papers again by expressing each hinted sentiment at length and as fully as it had been expressed before, in any suitable words that should occur to me. Then I compared my Spectator with the original, discovered some of my faults, and corrected them.
Seite 37 - Our present race of ephemerae will in a course of minutes become corrupt, like those of other and older bushes, and consequently as wretched. And in philosophy how small our progress! Alas! art is long, and life is short! My friends would comfort me with the idea of a name, they say, I shall leave behind me ; and they tell me I have lived j long enough to nature and to glory.