Century Illustrated Monthly Magazine, Volume 105Josiah Gilbert Holland, Richard Watson Gilder Century Company, 1923 - American literature |
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Page 28
... believe , has grasped the idea of democracy more con- cretely in his daily life than any man I have ever known . He realizes that it requires gifts of a high order to make simple cultural ideas comprehensible to simple people . He has ...
... believe , has grasped the idea of democracy more con- cretely in his daily life than any man I have ever known . He realizes that it requires gifts of a high order to make simple cultural ideas comprehensible to simple people . He has ...
Page 33
... believe , that I could not then have written otherwise , even if I were writing on a desert island for an audience of one Ph.D. Then , quite by accident , I got hold of George Moore . I loitered about a book - shop , and the proprietor ...
... believe , that I could not then have written otherwise , even if I were writing on a desert island for an audience of one Ph.D. Then , quite by accident , I got hold of George Moore . I loitered about a book - shop , and the proprietor ...
Page 34
... believe , that " kindliness " is better , on the whole , than " love . " Up to the point where I attempted to inject this idea , the story , I believe , has some respect- able qualities , but where this argu- gument begins , it becomes ...
... believe , that " kindliness " is better , on the whole , than " love . " Up to the point where I attempted to inject this idea , the story , I believe , has some respect- able qualities , but where this argu- gument begins , it becomes ...
Page 35
... believe that he is fighting for the liberation of all mankind and must be- lieve that his weapons and his plans are , all in all , the best ! Such a spirit of soberly smiling at himself would make his thesis more persuasive to some and ...
... believe that he is fighting for the liberation of all mankind and must be- lieve that his weapons and his plans are , all in all , the best ! Such a spirit of soberly smiling at himself would make his thesis more persuasive to some and ...
Page 36
... believe that not many of them are vitally alive , and most of those who are , apparently found other things more eminently worth while other things not particularly concerned with me or my kind . 87 And that is all . I started out to ...
... believe that not many of them are vitally alive , and most of those who are , apparently found other things more eminently worth while other things not particularly concerned with me or my kind . 87 And that is all . I started out to ...
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Popular passages
Page 698 - Because of thine indignation and thy wrath : for thou hast lifted me up, and cast me down.
Page 788 - This country, with its institutions, belongs to the people who inhabit it. Whenever they shall grow weary of the existing Government, they can exercise their constitutional right of amending it, or their revolutionary right to dismember or overthrow it.
Page 788 - The spirit of resistance to government is so valuable on certain occasions, that I wish it to be always kept alive. It will often be exercised when wrong, but better so than not to be exercised at all. I like a little rebellion now and then. It is like a storm in the Atmosphere.
Page 533 - There was a long, low, unfinished church basement, roofed over. A little, fat black man, ugly, but with intelligent eyes and big head, was seated on a plank platform beside a "throne," dressed in a military uniform of the gayest mid-Victorian type, heavy with gold lace, epaulets, plume, and sword.
Page 219 - Eye, to which all order festers, all things here are out of joint, Science moves, but slowly slowly, creeping on from point to point : Slowly comes a hungry people, as a lion, creeping nigher, Glares at one that nods and winks behind a slowly-dying fire. Yet I doubt not thro' the ages one increasing purpose runs, And the thoughts of men are widen'd with the process of the suns.
Page 222 - ... middle of the white dusty road, where the maguey thorns and the treacherous curved spines of organ cactus had not gathered so profusely. She would have enjoyed resting for a moment in the dark shade by the roadside, but she had no time to waste drawing cactus needles from her feet. Juan and his chief would be waiting for their food in the damp trenches of the buried city. She carried about a dozen living fowls slung over her right shoulder, their feet fastened together. Half of them fell upon...
Page 807 - And never elsewhere had he heard anything like her inviting, musical laugh, that was —41— » ' like the distant measures of dance music, heard through opening and shutting doors. He could remember the very first time he ever saw Mrs. Forrester, when he was a little boy. He had been loitering in front of the Episcopal church one Sunday morning, when a low carriage drove up to the door.
Page 237 - Concepcion could hear Juan's breathing. The sound vapored from the low doorway, calmly; the house seemed to be resting after a burdensome day. She breathed, too, very slowly and quietly, each inspiration saturating her with repose. The child's light, faint breath was a mere shadowy moth of sound in the silver air. The night, the earth under her, seemed to swell and recede together with a limitless, unhurried, benign breathing. She drooped and closed her eyes, feeling the slow rise and fall within...
Page 227 - I pray God everything goes well with Maria Concepcion from this out," she would say, "for she has had her share of trouble." When some idle person repeated this to the deserted woman, she went down to Lupe's house and stood within the clearing and called to the medicine woman, who sat in her doorway stirring a mess of her infallible cure for sores: "Keep your prayers to yourself, Lupe, or offer them for others who need them.
Page 229 - That's nothing. Look, my chief, to be married in the church is a great misfortune for a man. After that he is not himself any more. How can that woman complain when I do not drink even at fiestas enough to be really drunk? I do not beat her; never, never. We were always at peace. I say to her, Come here, and she comes straight.