The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 43Atlantic Monthly Company, 1857 - American essays |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 73
Page 108
... tion of the Poor , exaggerates or distorts the truth , I wish to present a plain state- ment of actual occurrences in corrobora- tion of his assertions . It is the expe- rience of a friend of mine , a laboring man , living in the ...
... tion of the Poor , exaggerates or distorts the truth , I wish to present a plain state- ment of actual occurrences in corrobora- tion of his assertions . It is the expe- rience of a friend of mine , a laboring man , living in the ...
Page 115
... tion . I do not find any direct expres- sion of Dr. Worcester's view , but he quotes without dissent these words from the Encyclopædia Britannica : " The most natural way of dividing words into syllables is to separate all the simple ...
... tion . I do not find any direct expres- sion of Dr. Worcester's view , but he quotes without dissent these words from the Encyclopædia Britannica : " The most natural way of dividing words into syllables is to separate all the simple ...
Page 217
... tion of copyright has been revived on the other side of the Atlantic , and has en- gaged the attention of an English com- mission and a continental congress . In their discussions , as in most of those in which the matter has been ...
... tion of copyright has been revived on the other side of the Atlantic , and has en- gaged the attention of an English com- mission and a continental congress . In their discussions , as in most of those in which the matter has been ...
Contents
Abolition of Poverty | 1 |
Labor and the Natural Forces | 9 |
Clarence Cook | 41 |
21 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Alatri American asked Bayard Taylor beautiful better Bill Webster called Champfleury character charming church civil course dear Deukalion Dunham England English Erwin eyes face faïence feel French G. P. Putnam's Sons girl give glish hand head heart Hicks ical Ingleside interest Irene labor lady land laughed Leadville less literary live looked Lydia Lydia looked means ment mind Miss Ruck mother nature never night Obed once passed Payson perhaps person pict play poems poet political poor preemption law pretty quern-stones Rosamond Rutland seemed smile sort speak Staniford story Street suppose sure talk tell thing thought tion turned universal suffrage Venice Vries walk wife woman women word writing York young