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Page 50
... deal of ridicule without much malice ; and I have received a great deal of kindness , not quite free from ridicule . I am used to it . " So again , we at our distance of seventy- odd years know not whether to laugh or cry when we think ...
... deal of ridicule without much malice ; and I have received a great deal of kindness , not quite free from ridicule . I am used to it . " So again , we at our distance of seventy- odd years know not whether to laugh or cry when we think ...
Page 62
... deal to set him in his proper light . But what has done more than anything else is that so many people have learned to read Keats's letters . They were published first as a part of a biography by Lord Houghton , who wrote a Life and ...
... deal to set him in his proper light . But what has done more than anything else is that so many people have learned to read Keats's letters . They were published first as a part of a biography by Lord Houghton , who wrote a Life and ...
Page 65
... deal of time reading Voltaire and Gibbon . Gibbon has survived the period since his time better than Voltaire has . What Voltaire did was to awake in Keats's mind the arguments for the Christian religion because of his very opposition ...
... deal of time reading Voltaire and Gibbon . Gibbon has survived the period since his time better than Voltaire has . What Voltaire did was to awake in Keats's mind the arguments for the Christian religion because of his very opposition ...
Contents
POETRY AND LIFE | 7 |
SHAKESPEARES CREED | 26 |
THE LINCOLN OF THE SECOND INAUGURAL | 43 |
Copyright | |
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A. A. Milne Abraham Lincoln accept bear beautiful believe called Christian Church compromise death declare delight divine doubt earth ence eyes fact faith familiar famous Fanny Fanny Brawne Father George Wyndham give glory hand Hans Christian Andersen happy hear heart heaven Holy human hymn Hymnal idea Jane Austen John John Keats Keats Kenneth Grahame kind King Kipling Kipling's Laertes letters Lincoln lines live Lord man's meaning mentators merely mind mood moral Naboth nature never once ourselves passage patience person phrase plain poems poet poetry possession preacher preaching Presbyterian Hymnal real princess reason religion religious remember Saint seems sense sermon Shakespeare simple sing song sort soul sound speak speech spirit stanzas story stuff tell thee theme things Thomas à Kempis Thou thought tion truth words wrote young